Gold prices on Friday posted their biggest weekly rise since November 2009, achieved after a weak U.S. labor market report renewed fears about the health of the world's biggest economy and spurred safe-haven buying.
U.S. crude oil futures ended 2.5 percent lower Friday, posting their biggest one-day percentage loss in two weeks, as a disappointing jobs report stoked more worries about oil demand. On the New York Mercantile Exchange, crude for August delivery settled at $96.20 a barrel, down $2.47, after trading between $95.60 and $99.18. The losses were not enough to erase gains for the week as oil prices continued to rebound from the four-month lows of late last month after IEA's announcement it was releasing 60 million barrels of government-held oil reserves from members. For the week, front-month crude rose $1.26, or 1.33 percent, from the $94.94 settlement of July 1, extending gains for a second straight week.