* World Gold Council says gold demand fell 9 pct in Q2
* Dollar strengthens, equities dip after Chinese stocks fall
* Hochschild sees silver at $13-15/oz in 2009
(Updates throughout, changes dateline-pvs TOKYO)
By Jan Harvey
LONDON, Aug 19 (Reuters) - Gold prices eased towards $935 an ounce in Europe on Wednesday as the dollar firmed, denting interest in bullion as a currency hedge, while fears over underlying demand for the precious metal resurfaced.
Spot gold <XAU=> was bid at $935.45 an ounce at 0843 GMT, against $937.30 an ounce late in New York on Tuesday. U.S. gold futures for December delivery <GCZ9> on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange fell $2.20 to $937 an ounce.
The World Gold Council said gold demand fell 9 percent in the second quarter on persistant weakness in jewellery buying, as the recession weighed on consumer sentiment and high prices put off purchasers. [
]Prices holding firm above $900 an ounce suggested areas of demand not identified in the report -- from investors in the COMEX futures market, for example -- firmly underpinned the market, analysts said.
"The strong correlation between the gold price and the U.S. dollar is pointing to these investors making up most of unidentifiable demand," said Commerzbank analyst Eugen Weinberg.
Weinberg said while in the longer run he believed inflation and dollar weakness would support gold buying, in the short term he felt prices were vulnerable to a correction.
"The dollar is becoming a bit stronger, equities are holding, gold demand has fallen to a six-year low and the SPDR gold trust is experiencing outflows," he said. "Why would I buy (gold)?"
The dollar and the yen both rose on Wednesday after a sharp drop in Chinese shares prompted investors to shy away from currencies seen as higher risk. [
]Crude prices also eased a touch after the previous session's gains, putting more pressure on gold, which often benefits from strength in oil as a sign of coming inflation. [
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PERSISTENT DOUBTS
European shares fell in early trade after a sharp fall in China's stock market, and as doubts over the scope of a global economic recovery persisted. [
] [ ]The fears weighed on the more industrial precious metals -- platinum, palladium and silver -- which are often influenced by economic strength or weakness as an indicator of demand.
Silver <XAG=> eased to $13.61 an ounce against $13.96.
"Silver... has traded lower this morning as gold comes under pressure and copper is down over 2 percent," said TheBullionDesk.com analyst James Moore.
"The metal will again look to gold as well as base metals for direction, but a failure to hold above the 100 & 40 day moving averages ($13.77/13.79) could see a deeper pullback to the $13.20 area."
Latin American silver producer Hochschild Mining <HOCM.L> said its production rose to a record 13.9 ounces in the first half of the year, and said it sees silver prices at $13-15 an ounce for the rest of the year. [
]Platinum <XPT=> was at $1,218.50 an ounce against $1,228, while palladium <XPD=> was at $266.50 against $271.
(Reporting by Jan Harvey; Editing by William Hardy)