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Gold dips as dollar companies, but set for weekly gain

Gold prices slipped on Friday after grazing a record high in the previous session as the dollar firmed, however was set for a weekly gain after the U.S. Federal Reserve stated it anticipated 3 rate cuts in 2024.

Spot gold was down 0.3% at $2,174.20 per ounce as of 1305 GMT, but was on track for a fourth weekly gain in five, up 0.8% so far.

U.S. gold futures fell 0.4% to $2,176.20.

The dollar advanced to a more than one-month high, making gold more expensive for other currency holders.

While the dollar's climb is a concern on gold and precious metals, the significant aspect is the medium-term development of Fed cutting its interest rates soon and this is plainly pointing towards lower opportunity costs for holding gold, said Quantitative Product Research study expert Peter Fertig.

Zero-yield gold normally benefits from low rate of interest.

Traders are pricing in a 75% likelihood of a June rate cut, according to the CME FedWatch Tool, up from 60% before the rate choice.

Gold rates scaled a new record high for the 5th time this month on Thursday as Fed members stated they still planned to cut rates by three-quarters of a portion point this year, despite recent strong inflation readings.

Gold's move into overbought area might require some near-term cooling in its current rally, with $2,148 a secret immediate technical support level to enjoy, said IG market strategist Yeap Jun Rong.

Financial investment streams into gold in the week to Wednesday hit their greatest in almost a year, while financiers pulled funds from cash equivalents and stocks, Bank of America Global Research said.

Silver dropped 0.4% to $24.67 per ounce, platinum fell 0.6% to $902.90 and palladium lost 1.1% to $999.68. All three were on track for a weekly fall.

(source: Reuters)