* Gold gives up early gains as shares jump
* Nikkei rises more than 1 pct on hopes for U.S. rescue plan (Updates prices, adds activity in physical market)
By Lewa Pardomuan
SINGAPORE , Sept 22 (Reuters) - Gold dropped more than 1 percent on Monday, losing some of its appeal as an alternative investment after share prices jumped on hopes for wide-ranging U.S. government measures to rescue the financial system.
In the physical sector, investors across Asia sold back their bullion for cash after prices briefly jumped to $900 an ounce as fears of financial stability in the United States spurred speculative buying. [
]Spot gold <XAU=> was trading at $869.70 an ounce, down $2.50 or $0.29 percent from New York's notional close on Friday, having hit an intraday low of $861.40 an ounce.
"I guess we may see some buying if the market stabilises, and it looks like gold will move within the recent trading range of $850 to $900," said a dealer in Hong Kong.
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley gave up their cherished investment banking status in return for cover under the Fed's wing to survive a financial storm that U.S. authorities aim to ride out with a $700 billion bailout plan. [
]"I think everyone is still going to focus on what the U.S. is going to do about the financial turmoil. The markets should be focusing more on the equity markets after the strong rebound in the U.S. equity markets," said Adrian Koh, analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore.
"Gold will probably consolidate around these regions for a while after the huge move last week. For the near-term, the $900-$905 regions will provide resistance to further upside while the $845 regions provide strong support," he said.
The Nikkei average <
> rose to a one-week high on Monday on hopes for the bank bailout proposed by the United States over the weekend to tackle the financial crisis. [ ]Gold rallied to a six-week high above $900 on Thursday due to fears the financial crisis had not yet run its course, and bullion also benefited from a wave of risk aversion after U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy.
Profit taking erased some of the gains and gold was below a record high of $1,030.80 hit in March.
Hopes the U.S. rescue plan would restore stability in the financial market also helped oil <CLc1> extend last week's rally. [
]. In theory, high oil prices lift gold's appeal as a hedge against inflation.COMEX gold futures advanced after settling down nearly 4 percent on Friday. The most active December contract <GCZ8> was trading up 1.13 percent at $874.50 from the New York settlement.
Platinum <XPT=> was trading at $1,167 per ounce, up $32.50 or 2.86 percent from Friday's notional close.
"I think platinum and palladium remains rather weighed cause I think they are more tied to the financial turmoil and slowing demands," said Koh of Phillip Futures.
Platinum tumbled to a 2-1/2-year low at $1,042 an ounce last week as slowing U.S. economy and poor car sales forced automakers to slash their production plans. Platinum is mainly used in autocatalysts. Precious metals prices at 0714 GMT Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Turnover Spot Gold 869.70 -2.50 -0.29 4.44 Spot Silver 12.60 0.05 +0.40 -14.69 Spot Platinum 1167.00 32.50 +2.86 -23.22 Spot Palladium 239.00 8.00 +3.46 -35.05 TOCOM Gold 2964.00 118.00 +4.15 -3.14 45115 TOCOM Platinum 3945.00 300.00 +8.23 -26.11 15753 TOCOM Silver 435.40 26.20 +6.40 -19.52 754 TOCOM Palladium 845.00 61.00 +7.78 -37.45 560 Euro/Dollar 1.4499 Dollar/Yen 106.38 TOCOM prices in yen per gram, except TOCOM silver which is priced in yen per 10 grams. Spot prices in $ per ounce. (Additional reporting by Chikafumi Hodo in Tokyo) (Editing by Clarence Fernandez)