Gold prices surged on Friday, marking their strongest week in six, propelled by renewed speculation of an interest rate cut from the Federal Reserve.
Spot gold ascended by 0.4% to $2,369 after reaching a more than two-week peak earlier in the day. Spot rates displayed a rise of slightly over 2% throughout the week.
Comex gold futures followed suit, climbing by 1.14%, equivalent to over $26 per ounce, to reach $2,366.90, with a peak of approximately $2,385 per ounce during trading sessions.
The Comex front-month price witnessed an uptick of nearly 2.5% for the week.
According to the World Council, the Australian dollar gold price concluded the week around $3,575 after touching $3,587 earlier on Friday.
Thursday’s data revealed a higher-than-anticipated surge in Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits, with 231,000 individuals receiving benefits, marking the highest figure since last August.
Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade, attributed gold’s resurgence to softer U.S. macro data this week. He remarked, “Gold has regained its mojo this week, thanks to some softer U.S. economic data. Initial jobless claims statistics were worse than expected, after the poor NFP (nonfarm payrolls) figures last Friday, indicating that the labor market may be loosening up.”
The upcoming release of the U.S. producer price index and consumer price index data is anticipated to significantly impact the metal’s trajectory. Waterer suggested that these inflation reports could influence the expected timeline for rate cuts. If inflation trends lower, gold stands to benefit, he added.
Comex copper also saw gains on Friday, rising by 1.65% to close at $4.65 a pound in New York, translating to a weekly increase of 1.8%.
Conclusion:
Gold prices surged, marking their strongest week in six, driven by speculation of a Fed interest rate cut.
Spot gold rose by 0.4% to $2,369, with a weekly increase of over 2%.
Comex gold futures climbed by 1.14% to $2,366.90 per ounce.
The Australian dollar gold price closed around $3,575.
Thursday’s data showed a surge in U.S. unemployment claims, hitting 231,000, the highest since last August.
Gold’s resurgence was attributed to softer U.S. macro data by Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade.
The upcoming release of U.S. producer and consumer price index data is expected to impact gold’s trajectory.
Comex copper also saw gains, rising by 1.65% to close at $4.65 a pound in New York, with a weekly increase of 1.8%.