Key Facts
Gold rose about 1.25 percent to roughly 4,182 dollars an ounce on Friday.
Silver climbed about 2.48 percent to around 62.86 dollars.
Gold posted its first weekly rise in five weeks, up about 2 percent.
Silver gained close to 6.7 percent over the week.
A soft June jobs report eased fears of an interest-rate increase.
The odds of a September rate rise fell to about 50 percent from 66 percent.
Both precious metals rose to close out the week, extending a recovery built on a friendlier view of interest rates. Gold snapped a long losing streak of weeks, and silver led the way with a much larger gain.
The driver sat outside the metals themselves. A weak jobs report reshaped what investors expect from the Federal Reserve, and precious metals were among the clearest winners.
01 A strong finish to the week
Gold rose about 1.25 percent to roughly 4,182 dollars an ounce on Friday, a gain of some 52 dollars. Silver climbed further, up about 2.48 percent to around 62.86 dollars.
The gains capped a strong week for both. Gold posted its first weekly rise in five weeks, while silver added close to 6.7 percent over the same stretch.
For gold the turn was notable. The metal had just come through its worst three-month stretch in more than a decade, so a positive week marked a clear change of tone.
Metal
Close (US$/oz)
Day change
Gold
4,182
+1.25%
Silver
62.86
+2.48%
Gold-to-silver ratio
66.5
−narrowing
Spot prices in US dollars per ounce, at Friday’s close. A rise is shown in green, a fall in red.
02 The jobs report did the work
The rally traced back to a soft June jobs report. The economy added just 57,000 new jobs, far short of the roughly 110,000 that had been expected.
Weak hiring gives the central bank less reason to keep raising interest rates. Metals that pay no interest tend to gain when the case for higher rates weakens.
Live Market IntelligenceCommodities — Live Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Commodities — Live Market Board
Global
Jul 6, 2026 · 06:48
Brent crude · benchmark
71.67
-0.18%
L 71.03day rangeH 72.49
+3.00% over 12 months
Market breadth · 15 names
53% advancing
8 ▲ advancing7 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
Gold
4,150
+0.91%
Silver
62.28
+2.70%
Copper
6.22
+1.69%
Iron ore
161.91
·
WTI crude
68.37
-0.47%
Full instrument board
Instrument
Last
Change
YoY
Prev.
High
Low
Volume
GOLD
4,150
+0.91%
+24.54%
4,113
4,216
4,134
92,306
SILVER
62.28
+2.70%
+70.09%
60.64
63.73
61.39
23,164
BRENT
71.67
-0.18%
+3.00%
71.80
72.49
71.03
24,220
WTI
68.37
-0.47%
+0.65%
68.69
69.26
67.82
86,154
COPPER
6.22
+1.69%
+24.75%
6.11
6.27
6.17
17,711
LITHIUM
76.53
-1.85%
+92.53%
77.97
78.19
75.69
313,963
IRON ORE
161.91
—
+70.04%
161.91
161.91
1
SOY
1,182
+4.42%
+14.54%
1,132
1,183
1,153
56,897
CORN
454.25
+6.88%
+8.67%
425.00
454.75
444.50
51,577
WHEAT
608.75
+3.09%
+12.78%
590.50
610.25
600.25
8,120
COFFEE
306.95
-2.76%
+9.61%
315.65
292.50
285.25
1,941
SUGAR
14.82
-0.20%
-8.97%
14.85
14.94
14.80
11,845
COCOA
5,284
+6.77%
-40.49%
4,949
5,287
5,144
2,406
ORANGE JUICE
170.70
-2.40%
-24.28%
174.90
172.55
166.90
—
COTTON
77.52
+5.79%
+18.55%
73.28
78.45
77.55
11,466
BEEF
239.03
-1.16%
+10.71%
241.82
243.00
238.93
32,771
CATTLE
360.80
-0.92%
+15.01%
364.15
365.23
360.30
7,443
USD/BRL
5.17
+0.01%
-4.62%
5.17
5.17
5.17
—
Largest moves today
CORN
454.25
+6.88%
COCOA
5,284
+6.77%
COTTON
77.52
+5.79%
SOY
1,182
+4.42%
WHEAT
608.75
+3.09%
COFFEE
306.95
-2.76%
SILVER
62.28
+2.70%
ORANGE JUICE
170.70
-2.40%
The session read
The Brent crude eased 0.18%, with breadth positive — 8 of 15 names higher. CORN led, while COFFEE lagged.
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03 The odds on rates shifted fast
Traders repriced the outlook within hours. The chance of a rate increase in September fell to about 50 percent, down from roughly 66 percent before the report.
That swing rippled straight into the metals. Comments from the head of the Federal Reserve earlier in the week, noting that inflation pressures had eased, had already pointed in the same direction.
04 A weaker dollar added fuel
The dollar fell as the rate view changed, heading for its largest weekly drop since April. Gold and silver are priced in dollars, so a softer currency makes them cheaper for buyers holding other money.
Lower oil prices helped too, easing the inflation worries that had weighed on the metals earlier in the year. Recovering shipping through the Strait of Hormuz added to the calmer mood.
05 Silver led the charge
Silver rose faster than gold once again, and the gap tells a familiar story. The metal is used heavily in industry, from solar panels to electronics, so it responds to both the mood on rates and the health of manufacturing.
By The Rio Times’ calculation, silver’s weekly gain of about 6.7 percent outpaced gold’s roughly 2 percent by close to 4.7 percentage points. That extra push is typical when sentiment turns positive.
06 The ratio tells the tale
The gold-to-silver ratio measures how many ounces of silver it takes to buy one ounce of gold. It narrowed to about 66.5 as silver climbed faster than gold for a second session running.
A falling ratio is a classic sign that silver is in favour. It often accompanies stretches when investors are willing to take on the more volatile of the two metals.
07 What to watch next
The path of US interest rates remains the main driver for both metals. Signals that the central bank will hold steady tend to lift prices, while renewed talk of a rate rise would weigh on them.
The dollar and the flow of economic data are the other two threads. Softer figures and a weaker currency would keep the recovery alive, while stronger data could cool it.
Assessment Confidence: Moderate
The week marked a clear turn for gold and silver after a long stretch of pressure, driven by a friendlier rate outlook rather than any shift in the metals themselves. The recovery should hold as long as the softer tone on rates and the weaker dollar persist.
Frequently Asked Questions
How did gold and silver close on Friday, July 3, 2026?
Gold rose about 1.25 percent to roughly 4,182 dollars an ounce, and silver climbed about 2.48 percent to around 62.86 dollars. Both capped a strong week.
What drove the metals higher?
A soft June jobs report eased fears that the Federal Reserve would raise interest rates. Lower rates reduce the appeal of holding cash over metals that pay no interest, and the dollar fell as well.
Why did silver rise more than gold?
Silver has a second engine that gold lacks. It is used heavily in industry, from solar panels to electronics, so it tends to swing further than gold when the mood turns positive.
Was this a good week for precious metals?
Yes. Gold posted its first weekly rise in five weeks after a difficult stretch, and silver gained close to 7 percent on the week, one of its stronger runs of the year.
What matters next for the metals?
The path of US interest rates is the main driver. Signs that the Federal Reserve will hold steady tend to lift both metals, while renewed talk of a rate rise would weigh on them.
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