* Gold regains strength, bargain hunters resurface
* Euro steadies, investors watch tension in Korea (Updates prices)
By Lewa Pardomuan
SINGAPORE, Dec 24 (Reuters) - Gold bounced on Friday after a drop to a one-week low in the previous session attracted bargain hunters, although thin trade ahead of the Christmas break and a volatile euro could push prices in either direction.
Tensions in the Korean peninsula could underpin sentiment after North Korea threatened a nuclear "sacred war" and South Korea vowed a "merciless counterattack" if it was attacked again.
Spot gold rose $3.60 an ounce to $1,383.49 an ounce by 0640 GMT, having dropped to as low as $1,372.05 an ounce on Thursday as the euro rebounded. Gold was well below a historical high of around $1,430 hit earlier this month.
"We've seen more talk of potential conflict in Korea ... we'd expect it will underpin gold for the moment," said Darren Heathcote, head of trading at Investec Australia in Sydney.
"It's certainly looking a little bit stronger from where it was earlier. But the market is extremely thin."
South Korea's land and sea exercises have prompted North Korea, which has threatened to reduce the South to ashes on many occasions, to denounce its richer neighbor as a warmonger. [
]North Korea could carry out a third atomic test next year to strengthen the credentials of its young leader-in-waiting Kim Jong-un, a research report from a South Korean foreign ministry institute said on Friday.[
]For scenarios, click [
]U.S. gold futures for February ended $6.9 an ounce at$1,380.5 an ounce on Thursday ahead of the long Christmas weekend in the United States.
The world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust , said its holdings slipped 1,284.973 tonnes by Dec. 23 from 1,288.616 tonnes on Dec. 22.
The euro held its ground on Friday after rebounding from a record low against the Swiss franc and a three-week low against the dollar, but is expected to come under renewed pressure after market players return from the Christmas break.
More ratings downgrades for European countries, including euro zone member Portugal, stoked fears that a debt crisis that has already engulfed Ireland and Greece may spread further. [
]China's Commerce Minister Chen Deming was quoted as saying on Friday that there are no quick fixes for Europe's debt crisis and China must be on the alert for any escalation of the problem, especially in January and February. [
]There was hardly any trade in the physical market, with jewellers in Singapore, Hong Kong and Indonesia already shut for the Christmas break.
"Basically, there's no physical trading, but people will still be cautious over tensions in Korea," said a dealer in Singapore.
"I guess most people won't turn short over the long weekend," said the dealer, adding safe-haven buying related to the tensions in the peninsula could still stir up trade.
In top consumer India, buyers waited for a price correction as the year wound down.
India's religious festivals, which boosted demand for gold, ended last month and the wedding season ended this month. But dealers have to buy to prepare for the next buying rush that starts after the harvest festival mid-January, following which weddings also take place.
Hong Kong jeweller Luk Fook Holdings (International) Ltd is speeding up its expansion in China's cities as increasingly rich Chinese snap up diamond rings, gold necklaces and ornaments. [
] Precious metals prices at 0640 GMT Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Turnover Spot Gold 1383.49 3.60 +0.26 26.27 Spot Silver 29.21 -0.10 -0.34 73.56 Spot Platinum 1712.00 -4.50 -0.26 16.70 Spot Palladium 749.50 -0.99 -0.13 84.83
Euro/Dollar 1.3123 Dollar/Yen 82.97
(Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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