Gold fell more than 1% on Friday as investors booked profits after recent record highs, while signs of easing geopolitical tensions further dampened the metal’s safe-haven appeal.
Spot gold was down 0.5% at USD 4,592.29 per ounce as of 01:39 p.m. ET (1839 GMT), after falling as low as USD 4,536.49 earlier in the session.
However, the metal is poised for its second consecutive weekly gain, of about 1.9%, after scaling a record peak of USD 4,642.72 on Wednesday.
US gold futures for February delivery settled 0.6% lower at USD 4,595.40.
“It’s a general retreat in the commodity complex after weeks of aggressive gains, with some profit-taking. The de-escalation of Middle East tensions has also removed some of the geopolitical premium in gold and other metals, especially silver,” said Marex analyst Edward Meir.
Geopolitical tensions appeared to ease as protests in Iran subsided, while US President Donald Trump took a wait-and-see approach and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin moved to mediate in Iran and de-escalate the situation.
On the trade front, the US and Taiwan struck a deal on Thursday that lowers tariffs on many of Taiwan’s semiconductor exports and channels new investments into US tech, and risks infuriating China.
Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve is expected to keep rates unchanged through the first half of the year, with a first 25-basis-point cut projected in June, as per data compiled by LSEG.
Safe-haven gold tends to do well during times of geopolitical and economic uncertainty, as well as when interest rates are low.
“I still think we have a chance of getting to USD 5,000 sometime this year, punctuated with these big corrections in the meantime,” Meir said.
Spot silver shed 2.9% to USD 89.65 per ounce, although it was headed for a weekly gain of over 12% after hitting an all-time high of USD 93.57 in the previous session.
JP Morgan said in a note on Friday that mounting risks from loosening ex‑US supply and ETF outflows to softer industrial demand and tighter Chinese trading curbs leave silver vulnerable to a sharp correction.
Spot platinum dropped 3.3% to USD 2,330.67 per ounce and headed for a weekly gain, while palladium lost 0.6% to USD 1,790.78 per ounce.
(Reporting by Anmol Choubey in Bengaluru, Editing by Louise Heavens, and Alan Barona)