* Gold gives up gains, falls from 2-wk high
* Holdings by SPDR Gold <XAUEXT-NYS-TT> steady
By Miho Yoshikawa
TOKYO, June 29 (Reuters) - Gold softened a touch to around $935 on Monday on position adjustments, giving up gains from the previous session when it briefly rose to a two week high.
Recent encouraging data from the U.S. and easing inflation worries have dulled some of bullion's appeal as an alternative investment, causing the precious metal to largely move within a broad band between $920 and $940.
Gold briefly rose to $948.20 per ounce on Friday, its highest since June 12.
Shuji Sugata, a manager at Mitsubishi Corp Futures & Securities, said the metal was leaning towards $940, supported by last week's comments by China that it might consider reviewing its assets.
On Thursday, the head of the economic department of China's Communist Party policy research office said the country should buy more gold, and that purchasing land in the United State was a better option for China than buying U.S. Treasuries. [
]"Although China has been saying this since last year, it is a factor supporting gold," he said.
Gold <XAU=> was at $935.40 per ounce at 0252 GMT, down 0.3 percent from the notional close of $938.05 in New York.
Sugata said gold was unlikely to move dramatically for the next few days, however, given that it is the end of the month.
He added that he did not anticipate much market volatility this week although trade was likely to slow ahead of the U.S. Independence Day holiday when liquidity was expected to fall, often a scenario for prices to fluctuate sharply.
"I think the market will lack clear direction as investors will mostly probably try to simply adjust positions," he said.
U.S. gold futures for August delivery <GCQ9> were at $936.0 an ounce, down 0.5 percent and approaching a roughly two-month low.
The dollar steadied on Monday after falling broadly late last week on China's renewed call for for a super-sovereign reserve currency and as improving appetite for risk dampened its appeal. [
] [ ]Reflecting that gold may have lost some of its appeal to investors, the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, the SPDR Gold Trust <GLD>, said its holdings remained at 1,125.74 tonnes as of June 26, when it fell 0.5 percent. [
]It is currently down 0.7 percent from record volumes of 1,134.03 tonnes, marked on June 1.
Noncommercial net long U.S. gold futures positions fell 5.3 percent to 166,294 lots in the week to June 23 from 175,543 lots, a weekly report by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed. [
]In other precious metals markets, spot silver <XAG=> fell by about 1 percent to $13.90 per ounce, down from the notional New York close of $14.06 and heading towards a roughly two-month low.
PRICES Precious metals prices at 0247 GMT Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Turnover Spot Gold 935.25 -2.80 -0.30 6.26 Spot Silver 13.90 -0.16 -1.14 22.79 Spot Platinum 1187.50 -9.00 -0.75 27.41 Spot Palladium 243.00 -0.50 -0.21 31.71 TOCOM Gold 2884.00 -35.00 -1.20 12.09 30240 TOCOM Platinum 3670.00 -54.00 -1.45 38.39 7465 TOCOM Silver 427.60 -8.20 -1.88 33.92 185 TOCOM Palladium 756.00 -2.00 -0.26 37.45 98 Euro/Dollar 1.4007 Dollar/Yen 95.50 TOCOM prices in yen per gram, except TOCOM silver which is priced in yen per 10 grams. Spot prices in $ per ounce. (Reporting by Miho Yoshikawa; Editing by Joseph Radford)