* Dollar outlook stays bearish amid financial system worry
* SPDR Gold holdings fall 4.575 tonnes last week [
]* Tokyo markets closed Tuesday for public holiday
By Risa Maeda
TOKYO, Nov 2 (Reuters) - Gold prices inched higher towards $1,050 an ounce on Monday after falling the previous business day, as the euro extended gains against the dollar.
Bullion fell about 1 percent last week, marking its first weekly loss since the week of Sept. 25, following four consecutive weeks of gains.
Spot gold <XAU=> inched up 0.2 percent to 1,046.25 an ounce at 0622 GMT, compared with New York's notional close of $1,044.40.
It hit a three-week low of $1,025.75 last week, down more than $40 from a record above $1,070 marked on Oct. 14, but has since showed resilience when compared with sharp falls in prices of other commodities, traders said.
"Investor risk aversion on Friday caused a sell-off in equities as well as the euro, resulting in a rise in the dollar. The firming dollar put pressure on gold," said Koichiro Kamei, managing director at financial research firm Market Strategy Institute in Tokyo.
"But gold's very role as a alternative to currencies is supporting its prices on dips," he said.
There are views that the dollar will remain bearish in the midterm as no immediate change is likely in U.S. monetary policy given concerns over the financial system, highlighted by news that CIT Group <CIT.N> filed for bankruptcy, Kamei said. [
]Buybacks by mining companies to reduce short positions for hedging were also behind gold's resilience, he said.
U.S. gold futures for December delivery <GCZ9> stood at $1,046.90 an ounce, up 0.6 percent from Friday when the contract fell $6.70 to $1,040.40 on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.
The number of noncommercial net long positions in U.S. gold futures fell to 241,777 lots in the week ended Oct. 27 from 250,107 lots, a weekly report by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed. [
]It was the second weekly decline from a record outstanding 253,955 lots.
Net long positions could fall further this month if and when hedge fund managers lock in profits ahead of their year-end book closings. But a drastic fall in the number of such positions is unlikely, Kamei said.
"People won't stop rolling over positions without signs that the Federal Reserve will from next year consider how to carry out an exit policy (from its monetary stimulus)," he said.
The world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust <GLD>, said its holdings fell 0.915 tonnes on Friday, making the total weekly decline to 4.575 tonnes. [
]The euro <EUR=> traded at $1.4774, up 0.4 percent from late U.S. trade on Friday when it lost over 0.8 percent.
Tokyo financial markets will be closed on Tuesday for a public holiday. Precious metals prices at 0624 GMT Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Turnover Spot Gold 1045.70 1.30 +0.12 18.81 Spot Silver 16.43 0.16 +0.98 45.14 Spot Platinum 1324.00 1.50 +0.11 42.06 Spot Palladium 322.00 3.50 +1.10 74.53 TOCOM Gold 3040.00 -33.00 -1.07 18.15 50571 TOCOM Platinum 3839.00 -41.00 -1.06 44.76 11286 TOCOM Silver 477.70 -10.40 -2.13 49.61 427 TOCOM Palladium 945.00 -15.00 -1.56 71.82 431 Euro/Dollar 1.4765 Dollar/Yen 90.00 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 Chikako Mogi; Editing by Joseph Radford)