* Gold edges up, holding near last week's record above $1,100 * SPDR holdings unchanged, net long U.S. gold positions slip
By Lewa Pardomuan
SINGAPORE, Nov 9 (Reuters) - Gold edged up on Monday and hovered near last week's lifetime high above $1,100 on a falling U.S. dollar and after a weaker-than-expected U.S. unemployment rate revived worries about the health of the global economy.
Gold has gained as much as 25.2 percent in 2009, driven by persistent weakness in the U.S. currency, and recently by the failure of a meeting of the Group of 20 finance officials to talk more specifically about the dollar's decline. [
]."The fundamental outlook for gold remains favourable. We expect a renewed test of the $1,100 mark for gold prices this week," Credit Suisse said in a research report.
Cash gold <XAU=> added $3.95 an ounce to $1,100.25 an ounce by 0306 GMT, having hit an intraday high of $1,100.40 -- within striking distance of Friday's record high of $1,100.90.
"We are in uncharted territory," said Darren Heathcote, head of trading at Investec Australia in Sydney.
"The trend is still intact. We're still looking at a positive gold market. (There) doesn't seem to be any particular reason to be selling. I don't, therefore, see it falling much below $1,100."
U.S. gold futures for December delivery <GCZ9> rose $5.0 an ounce to $1,100.7 an ounce after striking a record of $1,101.90 last week.
Japan's foreign reserves rose to a record high for the third straight month in October partly as rising gold prices inflated the value of its gold holdings, the Ministry of Finance said on Monday. [
]The dollar index slipped 0.23 percent <.DXY> <=USD> to 75.646, while the euro <EUR=> edged up to $1.4870, with a statement from the IMF that the dollar remained on the "strong side" despite a recent sell-off spurring another bout of selling in Asia. [
]U.S. employers cut 190,000 jobs in October, greater than the 175,000 fewer jobs forecast, and the unemployment rate rose to 10.2 percent, a 26-1/2-year high that was above average forecasts of a 9.9 percent rate. [
] and [ ] "I think we are going to be looking for more economic data to decide where we go from here," said Heathcote of Investec Australia. "We're probably still trading on thin volumes at the moment."The world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust <GLD>, said its holdings stood at 1,108.344 tonnes as of Nov. 6, unchanged from the previous business day. [
] Noncommercial net long U.S. gold futures positions fell 0.2 percent to 241,319 lots in the week to Nov. 3 from 241,777, a weekly report by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed. [ ]"I don't think there's physical buying but sentiment is still bullish because of a strong euro against the dollar and also firm crude oil prices," said a dealer in Hong Kong, adding that the market saw buying interest from speculators in the U.S. Japan and other parts of Asia.
Oil rose to $78 a barrel on Monday to recoup some of the previous session's near 3 percent loss on concerns that a powerful hurricane would cut U.S. oil and gas supplies, lifting gold's appeal as a hedge against inflation. [
] PRICES Precious metals at 0306 GMT Metal Last Change Pct chg Day ago pct MA 30 RSI Spot gold $1100.25 $3.95 +0.36% +22.66% $860.10 77 Spot silver $17.52 $0.14 +0.81% +46.24% $11.29 59 Spot plat $1354.50 $12.00 +0.89% +0.89% $1335.55 51 TOCOM gold 3,202 44 +1.39% +5.36% 3,042 66 TOCOM plat 3,941 -1 -0.03% +2.79% 3,872 47 Currencies Euro/dlr $1.491 $0.014 +0.93% +1.30% Dlr/yen 90.19 -0.14 -0.15% +0.62% (Editing by Clarence Fernandez)