The price of gold recovered an earlier dip in London trade Friday, heading for the best weekly gain since January – and the highest Friday finish since mid-February – as the Dollar hit fresh 3-month lows following weak US data.

Industrial production fell month-on-month for the 5th time running in April, data from the Federal Reserve said, while capacity utilization slipped to the weakest since August 2013.

US economic forecasters have cut their average growth prediction for 2015 from 3.2% to 2.4% since 3 months ago, according to the Philadelphia Fed quarterly survey.

Consumer sentiment on the Reuters/Michigan survey today was also weak providing the weakest reading in 6 months.

Recent US data may trigger the long-awaited US interest raise to be postponed further, according to a note from the bullion and commodities desk at Commerzbank.

Silver has been the best performing precious metal this week, up a staggering 8.8%.

With silver bullion surging through $17 per ounce to hit 3-month Dollar highs Thursday, the SLV ended the day needing 89 fewer tonnes to back its shares, marking the third heavy liquidation of the last 3 weeks and shrinking 2.5% since then to 9,976 tonnes.

The giant GLD – the world’s largest exchange-traded trust fund by value at the peaks of 2011 and 2012 – shed another 4 tonnes of gold to end Thursday needing less than 724 tonnes of gold backing, a 6-year low when first reached in late 2014 and now reversing three-quarters of January’s early jump.

In London on Friday, the PM run of global benchmark the LBMA Gold Price saw the suggested price need to rise – and bring out more selling – for the first time this week, finding a balance with buyers at $1220.50 per ounce.

The coming week’s economic data in Europe will be closely examined following European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi saying that he will continue to pump money into the system, Quantitative Easing is set to continue in Europe until consumers gain confidence.