Is the Dollar rally taking a breather? Gold, Silver and crypto attempt a recovery [Video]
Author

Kim Cramer Larsson
KCL Consult
Kim Cramer Larsson hosts the Daily Technical Update, a daily 15-20 minutes video with live charts.
Author

Kim Cramer Larsson
KCL Consult
Kim Cramer Larsson hosts the Daily Technical Update, a daily 15-20 minutes video with live charts.
The GBP/USD pair trades in positive territory around 1.3360 during the early European session on Friday. The British Pound gathers strength against the US Dollar on a weaker-than-expected US Nonfarm Payrolls report.
The EUR/USD pair attracts some dip-buyers during the Asian session on Friday, stalling the previous day's modest pullback from the 1.1470-1.1475 region, or a nearly two-week high. Spot prices currently trade just below mid-1.1400s and seem poised to register gains for the first time in three weeks as receding US Federal Reserve rate hike bets keep the US Dollar depressed.
Gold is seen building on this week's recovery move from its lowest level since November 2025 and gaining positive traction for the third straight day. The precious metal advances to the $4,200 neighborhood, or a one-and-a-half-week high, during the Asian session and remains on track to register gains for the first time in five weeks.
Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple extend their recovery on Friday as improving risk sentiment and strengthening technical indicators support the broader cryptocurrency market. BTC reclaims the $61,300 level after rebounding from a 21-month low earlier this week, while ETH holds firm near $1,700 following a sharp two-day recovery.
Market attention turns to next week's FOMC minutes for any signs of what could shift a divided Committee from a hold toward rate hikes. The dot plot from the last meeting made clear that policymakers are split on whether rate hikes are warranted, but with forward guidance getting tamped down under Chair Warsh, the Fed's reaction function remains uncertain in terms of what exactly would build broader support for more restrictive policy.
Financial markets came to Sintra looking for clues about the Federal Reserve's (Fed) next move. They largely left with confirmation that Fed Chair Kevin Warsh intends to make those clues much harder to find.