Investing.com– Gold prices slipped on Friday as the week ended, influenced by a stronger U.S. dollar, however still achieved a weekly gain as a slight pullback in the dollar provided support 
Spot Gold  fell 0.7% to $2,639.3 per ounce, while gold futures  expiring in February gained 0.6% to $2,653.4 an ounce by 15:15 ET (20:15 GMT). Gold set for weekly gain, strong dollar limits gains 
The yellow metal was set to gain nearly 2% this week, its best weekly gain since November 17. It had declined in the previous two weeks.  
The US Dollar Index  was slightly down 0.3% on Friday but remained near a two-year high it hit last month. The US Dollar Index Futures  were also lower. 
A weaker dollar typically drives gold prices higher because it makes the metal cheaper for buyers using other currencies. 
Markets are cautious at the start of 2025, as the U.S. Federal Reserve has signaled only two more interest rate cuts this year. 
High interest rates typically pressure gold prices lower, as they increase the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like gold while making interest-bearing investments more attractive. 
Other precious saw gains on Friday. Platinum Futures  rose 2.8% $948.05 an ounce, while Silver Futures  gained 0.6% to $30.09 an ounce. Copper remains under pressure, markets await fresh China stimulus 
Among industrial metals, copper prices were subdued as a strong dollar weighed, while Chinese factory activity data released a day earlier failed to provide support. 
Chinese manufacturing activity  grew in December but at a slower-than-anticipated pace, data released on Thursday showed. 
The data suggests that the impact of recent stimulus measures is waning. Markets are holding out for more clarity on Beijing’s plans for stimulus measures this year. 
The People’s Bank of China said it will cut interest rates from the current level of 1.5% “at an appropriate time” in 2025, the Financial Times reported on Friday. 
Benchmark Copper Futures  on the London Metal Exchange inched 1.1% higher to $8,900 a ton, while February Copper Futures  were 1.3% lower at $4.0777 a pound.
Source: Investing.com

