The statement makes two distinct claims: 1) the price of gold increased by 6% in November, and 2) this was its fourth consecutive monthly gain. The evidence overwhelmingly supports the second claim, but questions the first.Multiple high-authority financial news sources, including Reuters, CNBC, and The Economic Times, explicitly and consistently state that gold was set for its "fourth consecutive monthly gain." This part of the statement is very well-supported and appears to be factually correct.However, the specific figure of a 6% increase is not directly supported and is contradicted by other credible sources. A CNBC report states the gain was 4.6%, while The Economic Times reports a 5% rise. While these figures are in a similar range to 6%, they are numerically different. The 6% figure appears to be a slight overstatement or an approximation. The primary data sources listed (Bloomberg, Trading Economics, Goldprice.org) would be needed to calculate the exact percentage, but based on the provided journalistic summaries, the true figure is likely between 4.6% and 5%.Overall, the statement accurately captures the market trend and the four-month streak, but it is slightly inaccurate on the specific percentage gain. Because the core substance of the statement is correct, it is assessed as "likely_true" with high confidence, with the probability adjusted to reflect the numerical discrepancy.