PRECIOUS-Gold steadies around $940/oz, ETF unchanged
* Buying checked as currencies confined to narrow ranges
* SPDR gold ETF holdings XAUEXT-NYS-TT unchanged
By Risa Maeda
TOKYO, June 18 (Reuters) - Gold kept climbing for the third straight session on Thursday, though it struggled to rise decisively above $940 per ounce as a halt in the slide of the dollar curbed buying.
On Wednesday, gold rose as the dollar fell versus most other major currencies after an unexpectedly small rise in U.S. inflation and a debt rating downgrade for U.S. banks from Standard & Poor's. [ID:nN17353623]
But the U.S. currency barely moved from late U.S. levels on Thursday, providing little further direction for gold. [USD/]
Investors were reluctant to trade currencies actively before hearing the Federal Reserve's stance on rate moves and bond buying at its two-day meeting next week after a spike in long-term yields this month.
Spot gold XAU= rose 0.1 percent to $939.55 per ounce at 0324 GMT from New York's notional close of $938.40.
It earlier rose as high as $942.70, a level last seen on June 12 and up almost 2 percent from this week's trough of $925.50.
The dollar's recent strength has hurt gold's allure as a hedge against the U.S. currency, sending bullion prices falling from a three-month high around $990 an ounce reached two weeks earlier.
"People have got used to following after the currency markets. Now that the currency markets are caught in narrow ranges, so is the gold market," said Yuichi Ikemizu, Tokyo branch manager at Standard Bank Plc.
U.S. gold futures for August delivery GCQ9 were at $940.60 per ounce, up 0.5 percent from Wednesday's settlement of $936 on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.
But gold was seen as firmly underpinned after a fall below $930 earlier this week that was short-lived due to physical buying by retail investors mainly from South East Asia.
"The downside risk seems to be receding after a fall below $930 encouraged the restart of physical buying. But I don't think gold is buoyant enough to challenge a level above $950 for now," Ikemizu said.
In Tokyo, scattered investor buying of gold bars emerged earlier this week, but that was not enough to totally offset physical selling to lock in profits, traders said.
Demand from investors seeking alternatives to conventional assets stayed weak. The world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), said its holdings stood at 1,132.15 tonnes on June 17, unchanged since June 5. [GOL/SPDR] Precious metals prices at 0333 GMT Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Turnover Spot Gold 939.10 0.70 +0.07 12.78 Spot Silver 14.36 0.04 +0.28 -2.78 Spot Platinum 1210.50 9.50 +0.79 -20.36 Spot Palladium 241.50 1.00 +0.42 -34.38 TOCOM Gold 2905.00 -19.00 -0.65 -5.07 27596 TOCOM Platinum 3749.00 -58.00 -1.52 -29.78 11373 TOCOM Silver 441.10 -1.20 -0.27 -18.47 204 TOCOM Palladium 755.00 -12.00 -1.56 -44.12 182 Euro/Dollar 1.3949 Dollar/Yen 95.80 TOCOM prices in yen per gram, except TOCOM silver which is priced in yen per 10 grams. Spot prices in $ per ounce. (Reporting by Risa Maeda; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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