* Gold retreats as dollar strength saps buying
* IMF sells 200 tonnes of gold to India's central bank
* SPDR gold holdings unchanged at 1,103.519 T
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(Updates prices, adds comments)
By Maytaal Angel
LONDON, Nov 3 (Reuters) - Gold rose back above $1,060 on Tuesday as more investors overlooked a dollar rally and responded positively to news the International Monetary Fund sold 200 tonnes of gold to India's central bank.
Spot gold <XAU=> was quoted at $1,062.00 an ounce at 1302 GMT, up from $1,059.15 quoted late in New York on Monday. Earlier on Tuesday, the metal hit a near two-week high of $1,066.15, within sight of the Oct. 14 record high of $1,070.40.
"The IMF (news) is bullish but look at copper prices, look at the euro dollar, look at stock markets, it's very impressive gold can actually rally given all other risky assets are falling," said Jesper Dannesboe, senior commodity strategist at Societe Generale.
"I think (gold) will take out the record high. Once the dollar stabilises, gold will take off."
The IMF said on Monday it had sold 200 tonnes of gold to India for $6.7 billion. Although an IMF gold sale had been flagged for some time, it lifted some uncertainty from the market by helping soak up supply. [
]"It's potentially bullish from several points of view," said Commerzbank analyst Eugen Weinberg. "Gold was kept off the market and sold directly to central banks so potential sales on market are limited."
The IMF sale, part of an agreement to sell about an eighth of the Fund's stock, fuelled speculation that other governments -- including Beijing -- may be ready to diversify their reserves even at near record prices.
"It's a rumour but I'd say where there is smoke there is also some fire," said Weinberg.
U.S. gold futures for December delivery <GCZ9> rose $9.40 an ounce to $1,063.30 on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. Last month, futures hit a record $1,072 an ounce.
DOLLAR WEIGHS
The dollar hit a one month high against a currency basket on Tuesday as investors retreated from risk assets. A strong dollar makes gold and other commodities priced in the U.S. unit less attractive for non-U.S. investors. [
]The U.S Federal Reserve begins a two-day policy-setting meeting later this session. While the bank is expected to keep benchmark interest rates unchanged near zero, there is speculation it might alter its pledge to keep rates low for an "extended period". [
]."The Fed meeting might outweigh the positive impact of the IMF sales should the dollar become stronger," said Weinberg.
In the broader markets, European stocks fell to a one month low as banks suffered poor results. Declining equity markets used to boost gold's safe haven appeal, but they have recently worked to increase safe haven flows to the dollar, at the expense of gold. [
]On the physical investment side, the picture still looked subdued. The world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust <GLD>, said its holdings stood at 1,103.519 tonnes as of Nov. 2, unchanged from the previous business day. [
]Among other precious metals, spot silver <XAG=> was at $16.42 an ounce, against $16.43 an ounce late on Monday.
Silver has been boosted lately by a pick-up in industrial demand. The metal is primarily industrial in application, and is widely used in electronics manufacturing.
Platinum <XPT=> was at $1,330.50 an ounce against $1,334.00, while palladium <XPD=> was at $319.00 against $321.50. (Additional reporting by Lewa Pardomuan; Editing by Keiron Henderson)