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Gold falls on a firm US Dollar, on the way to third weekly gain

Gold falls on a firm US Dollar, on the way to third weekly gain

The dollar strengthened on Friday, and investors took profits. Gold prices had risen three times in a row this week amid concerns about trade wars and expectations of a Federal Reserve rate cut later this year.

As of 0848 GMT, spot gold had fallen 0.4% to $3033.36 per ounce. U.S. Gold Futures fell 0.1% to $3.039.60.

Bullion is on course for its third consecutive weekly gain after adding 1.6% this week. On Thursday, it reached an all-time record high of $3.057.21 per kilogram.

Han Tan, chief market analyst at Exinity Group, said: "Spot gold has seen a healthy drop after it surged to new record highs over $3,000. The dollar's recent strength also caused gold to ease down."

On Friday, the U.S. Dollar was up by 0.2%, making bullion priced in greenbacks more expensive to overseas buyers.

Tan stated that "gold's uptrend will remain intact so long as risk-on attitudes do not take hold, particularly as the deadline for the next U.S. wave of tariffs is approaching on April 2,"

Donald Trump, the President of the United States, still plans to implement new reciprocal tariffs on this date.

Gold has reached 16 new highs in the past few years, four of which are above the $3,000 threshold.

Standard Chartered analyst Suki cooper wrote in a Thursday note that "ETP demand (Exchange Traded Products), even with a weakening of physical demand in India and China, could continue to drive gold prices higher."

In a low interest rate environment, gold, which is traditionally seen as a safe investment in times of economic or inflation volatility, does well.

As expected, the Fed kept its benchmark rate unchanged on Wednesday. Policymakers see the central bank delivering two quarter-percentage-point cuts by year-end.

Silver spot fell 1.5%, to $33.04 per ounce. Platinum lost 0.4%, to $981.05. Palladium dropped 0.4%, to $948.43. All three metals were headed for losses this week.

(source: Reuters)