* Gold inches down on profit taking after 2 pct gain
* ETF holdings hit new record above 843 tonnes
* Nikkei down 3.4 pct, dollar up, oil steady
* Silver strikes 4-month high before slipping (Updates prices)
SINGAPORE, Jan 30 (Reuters) - Gold edged down on Friday as speculators booked profits after prices rallied more than 2 percent the previous day, but buying interest from investors remained strong, with ETF holdings hitting another record.
Platinum dropped more than 1 percent on fears of falling demand after Ford Motor Co <F.N> reported a record loss, while silver rallied to its strongest in four months before slipping to track weaker gold.
Gold <XAU=> was trading at $903.00 an ounce, down $3.75 from New York's notional close on Thursday, when it jumped more than 2 percent after U.S. stocks tumbled on fears of a worsening recession. Gold was within sight of a 3-month high of $915.30 hit on Monday.
The world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, the SPDR Gold Trust <GLD>, said it held arecord 843.59 tonnes of gold as of Jan. 29, up 10.71 tonnes fromJan. 27, reflecting flight-to-quality buying amid chaos in the financial sector. [
]Volatile stock and currency markets prompted the funds to shift their money back into gold for better returns, said Yukuji Sonoda, precious metals analyst at Daiichi Commodities in Tokyo.
"The next target is of course $1,000," said Sonoda, referring to a level last seen in March, when gold struck a record $1,030.80 on fund buying driven by fears of rising energy costs and uncertainties in the dollar's outlook.
"Silver is also very interesting. Actual buying is a good support for the price," said Sonoda, adding that the white metal also benefited from investment buying.
Industrial precious metal silver's appeal as a refuge for investors worried about financial instability will help it perform better than its rivals platinum and palladium, a Reuters survey showed. [
]In other markets, the Nikkei <
> shed 3.4 percent on a firmer yen and recession worries. Adding to the gloom, Japanese industrial production fell a record 9.6 percent in December, while core annual inflation slowed to 0.2 percent. [ ]The euro slipped to $1.2907 <EUR=> on risk aversion. [
]. Oil <CLc1> was steady above $41 a barrel on concerns about a potential strike among unionised U.S, refinery workers. [ ]"I guess the market is very quiet in Asia, with people in China still on holiday. The funds have been buying and that's why we seen an increase on the ETF, but they are also keen to book profits," said a dealer in Hong Kong.
Platinum <XPT=> was trading at $961.00 an ounce, down $11.50 from New York's notional close as worries about falling demand resurfaced for the metal, which is mainly used in autocatalysts to clean exhaust fumes.
"Ford news shock the platinum market," said Sonoda of Daiichi Commodities.
Ford Motor Co <F.N> reported a record $14.6 billion full-year loss on Thursday but said it would have the cash to survive the worst downturn in auto sales in decades without a U.S. government bailout. [
]Ford plans to cut some 2,500 white-collar jobs and draw down its remaining credit line after burning through $5.5 billion of cash as global auto sales plunged. PRICES Metal Last Change Pct chg Day ago pct MA 30 RSI Spot gold $903.00 -$3.75 -0.41% +0.67% $860.10 70 Spot silver $12.25 -$0.06 -0.49% +2.25% $11.29 79 Spot plat $961.00 -$11.50 -1.18% +0.84% $951.55 62 COMEX gold $904.70 -$1.00 -0.11% +1.86% $860.47 68 TOCOM gold 2,604 55 +2.16% +0.81% 2,484 57 TOCOM plat 2,766 23 +0.84% +0.95% 2,672 52 Currencies
Euro/dlr $1.291 -$0.023 -1.72% -2.03% Dlr/yen 89.65 -0.73 -0.81% +0.82% (Reporting by Lewa Pardomuan; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)