* Gold gets caught up in selling of other assets * Bullion still ultimately seen extending Q2 gains * Platinum, palladium biggest fallers on growth concerns
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By Jan Harvey
LONDON, July 1 (Reuters) - Gold prices dropped to a three-week low on Thursday and other precious metals slipped, caught up in selling of equities and other assets after U.S. economic data disappointed the financial markets.
Gold is expected to extend its recent gains in the medium term, however, after outperforming most other commodities and all other metals in the second quarter as investors turned to bullion as a haven from risk in the wider markets.
Spot gold <XAU=> hit a three-week low of $1,215.45 and was bid at $1,219.93 an ounce at 1531 GMT, against $1,241.35 late in New York on Wednesday. U.S. gold futures for August delivery <GCQ0> slid $24.10 to $1,221.80.
"Gold has been caught up in commodity liquidation after poor data and as equities (fall)," said Simon Weeks, head of precious metals at the Bank of Nova Scotia.
"Usual story -- selling first as people need cash... and then further down the road, the gold as a currency demand will kick in."
Equity markets in London and New York extended losses on Thursday after data showed a slower-than-expected rate of manufacturing growth in June and a sharp drop in May pending home sales. [
]The dollar extended losses against the euro, while oil prices also fell 4 percent and base metals including copper, zinc and nickel dropped sharply. [
] [ ] [ ]Investors are now awaiting key U.S. payrolls data on Friday as an indicator for the next direction of trade.
"The labour market report is quite critical because a lot of the recent consumer confidence drop came about because people are concerned about their employment prospects," said Michael Widmer, an analyst at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch.
"If you do get a slowdown, the picture for some of the cyclical asset classes may be perceived to be not as strong... and that could be quite positive for gold overall."
GOLD SEEN EXTENDING GAINS
In the medium term, gold is still seen as well supported by the threat of slowing global growth and further financial market instability, after a strong performance in the second quarter.
Many commodities struggled in the second three months of the year as a soaring dollar and doubts about the strength of the economic recovery sapped demand for raw materials.
The benchmark Reuters Jefferies CRB index <.CRB>, which covers 19 mostly U.S.-traded commodities, finished down about 5.4 percent, its second quarterly loss in a row. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
For a graphic showing commodities' relative price performance in the first half, click on: http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/10/CMD_PRFG0510.html ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
Investment in gold has been solid, with holdings of the world's largest gold exchange-traded fund, New York's SPDR Gold Trust <GLD>, still at a record 1,320 tonnes on Wednesday.
Demand for physical bullion in major consumer India was slack, however, as high prices and seasonal factors weighed.
India saw a sharp drop in imports in June, signalling recent record prices are weighing on demand even as the world's largest ETF reported record holdings. [
]Among other precious metals, silver <XAG=> also fell to a three-week low at $17.89 and was later bid at $18.02 an ounce against $18.55.
Platinum group metals, largely used in manufacturing catalytic converters, were among the biggest fallers.
Platinum <XPT=> hit a session low at $1,491.50 and was later at $1,500.30 an ounce against $1,531.50. Palladium <XPD=> touched a low at $422.43 and was later at $428 against $442.
"Today's U.S. auto sales data will... be monitored for a possible slowdown in demand," said TheBullionDesk.com analyst James Moore. (Reporting by Jan Harvey; Editing by Jane Baird)