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Gold poised to gain weekly gains on weaker dollar

The gold price rose on Friday, and was on track to rise for the week. This was supported by a falling dollar. Investors were waiting for additional U.S. data in order to assess whether a rate cut is likely for December after comments made by Federal Reserve officials that were hawkish.

As of 0638 GMT, spot gold was up 0.3%, at $4,183.31 an ounce. Bullion has risen 4.6% this week.

U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery eased by 0.2% to $4.185.90 an ounce.

Gold became more appealing to other currency holders as the dollar index fell for a second consecutive week.

GoldSilver Central MD Brian Lan stated that "this week, gold did well. It's mostly because there was a slight weakening in the dollar as well as the speculative flow coming into the market expecting the Fed will lower interest rates."

The gold price fell slightly because the Fed was not expected to reduce rates as aggressively due to the slowdown in the economy and the inflation fears.

A growing number of Fed policymakers have expressed reluctance to ease further, citing concerns about inflation and signs that the labour market has remained relatively stable after two rate reductions this year.

The Fed cut rates 25 basis points last month. However, Chair Jerome Powell has signaled caution about another rate reduction this year. This is partly due to the lack of data.

According to CME Group’s FedWatch tool, traders are now pricing in a probability of 51% for a rate cut by a quarter point next month. This is down from 64% the previous session.

Gold that does not yield tends to perform well when interest rates are low and economic uncertainty is present.

After a 43-day record shutdown, which had caused investors to worry and disrupted economic data flow, the U.S. Government reopened.

Silver spot rose 1%, to $52.82 an ounce, and is on course for its best weekly performance since September 2024.

Palladium rose by 0.2% on Friday to $1,429.80. Platinum was up 0.4% at $1,586.80. (Reporting and editing by Rashmia Aich, Subhranshu Sahu and Brijesh Pate in Bengaluru).

(source: Reuters)