(Updates with quotes and prices)
By Atul Prakash
LONDON, Feb 14 (Reuters) - Platinum hit a record high for the 11th straight day on Thursday as a deepening power crisis in top producer South Africa forced another miner to forecast lower output and prompted investors to snap up the metal.
But profit-taking later erased gains, with prices <XPT=> falling to $1,982/1,990 an ounce at 1351 GMT after hitting $2,025, against $1,985/1,995 in New York on Wednesday. It has gained 32 percent this year after surging 37 percent in 2007.
The power crisis in South Africa, which accounts for 80 percent of global platinum output, continued to affect mining operations. Mines were shut for five days in late January and are now getting only 90 percent of normal electricity supply.
"Definitely the situation is serious and this is getting reflected in the price. We will have shortages this year and probably the next year," said Frederic Panizzutti, precious metals analyst at MKS Finance.
"The supply-demand balance was already extremely tight. What has happened recently and what is going to happen for the next two to three years are definitely going to widen the gap and additional shortages are going to tighten the market further."
State utility Eskom's Chief Executive Officer Jacob Maroga said the company will consider buying back "significant" amounts of power from industrial customers. [
]"With no end in sight to the South African power crisis it is difficult to be anything but bullish, with platinum potentially able to gain a further $600-$800 over the next two to three months," said James Moore, analyst at TheBullionDesk.com.
Aluminium rose more than 4 percent to its highest since July 2007 at the London Metal Exchange, driven by fears of reduced supply owing to power shortages in South Africa and China. [
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WIDENING DEFICIT
Analysts say the platinum deficit could widen to more than 400,000 ounces by the end of 2008, compared with about 265,000 ounces in 2007. The market had a surplus of 65,000 ounces in 2006 following seven successive years of deficits.
Impala Platinum <IMPJ.J>, the world's second biggest platinum producer, said its output in the full year to end-June would decline to just under 2 million ounces, compared to 2.026 million ounces in 2007, due to the power crisis. [
]Other producers have also lowered forecasts. Anglo Platinum <AMSJ.J>, the world's top producer, said this week electricity problem alone would cut output by 120,000 ounces in 2008, and had cost 30,000 ounces in lost output since January.
Production at South Africa's Northam Platinum <NHMJ.J> fell 16.5 percent to 150,755 ounces during the first half from July to December. For the second half to end-June, it said production would match the first half if the electricity crisis restricted the company to continue using 90 percent of normal power.
Analysts noted strong interest in platinum's exchange traded fund (ETF), with the metal held by London-based ETF Securities rising by 42,000 ounces in a week to 267,000 ounces now.
"The ETFs are now tying up a substantial amount of physical platinum and this represents a large proportion of the 1 to 2 million ounces of platinum bullion we believe to be in stocks," said Robin Bhar, analyst at UBS Investment bank.
"If growth continues at half of this recent rate then the ETF will hit a million ounces in the fourth quarter of 2008, although we would expect a physical squeeze to develop before then," he said.
In other metals, spot gold <XAU=> fell to $904.20/905.10 an ounce from $906.70/907.50 in New York. Palladium <XPD=> rose to $433/437 an ounce from $430/435, while silver <XAG=> edged down to $17.18/17.23 an ounce from $17.28/17.33 in New York.
(Additional reporting by Lewa Pardomuan in Singapore)
(Editing by Chris Johnson)