* Spot palladium hits 18-mth high, platinum hits 17-mth peak
* Gold pressured by firmer dollar
* Holdings by SPDR Gold Trust <GLD> steady
(adds quotes, updates prices)
By Michael Taylor
LONDON, Jan 19 (Reuters) - Platinum and palladium prices struck their highest levels since mid-2008 on Tuesday, with investment demand fuelled by the recent launch of exchange-traded funds in the United States.
By contrast gold struck a subdued note, with upside progress restricted by currency fundamentals. The dollar strengthened against the euro as German investor sentiment soured, with concern also remaining about Greece's finances. [
]Spot platinum <XPT=> rose to $1,647.50 per ounce, its highest since August 2008, and was at $1,618 an ounce by 1438 GMT, against $1,612 quoted late on Monday.
Palladium <XPD=> hit a high of $461.50 an ounce, a level not seen since July 2008. It later eased back to trade at $454.50 versus $457.50 as the dollar gained traction.
Gold <XAU=> was bid at $1,133.60 an ounce against $1,132.50 an ounce on Monday. U.S. gold futures for February delivery <GCG0> were at $1,133.6 per ounce, up 0.3 percent.
A U.S. subsidiary of London's ETF Securities launched the United States' first platinum and palladium-backed ETFs earlier this month, and uptake has been healthy. [
]"Gold came off a little bit with the stronger dollar but there is some good physical demand which stopped it from falling further," said Michael Kempinski, a trader at Commerzbank. "The euro/dollar gives more potential for the downside."
"The focus is definitely on the new (platinum and palladium) ETFs, that's the main driver," he added. "Gold is in a trading range...the safe haven-buying is over right now, so it's more about the ETFs for the PGMs (platinum Group Metals)."
Analysts said appetite for the funds was having a disproportionate effect on the platinum and palladium markets, which are much smaller in volume terms than gold.
In addition, signs the global economy is steadying and expectations central banks may start draining ample funds from the banking system or raising interest rates later in the year are also prompting investors to buy the strategic platinum group metals.
TECHNICAL UPTREND?
Platinum's rise may soon stall as the market consolidates its overbought position, but the technical uptrend is likely to eventually carry prices to record highs, according to analysts who study past price moves to determine future price moves. [
]Gold prices were steady, with a rise in the dollar capping gains. Strength in the U.S. unit curbs gold's appeal as an alternative asset and makes dollar-priced commodities more expensive for holders of other currencies.
"Bullion continues to underperform when compared to other precious metals," said Andrey Kryuchenkov, an analyst at VTB Capital. "Bullion has been gradually decoupling from the precious metals sector."
"Gold continues to trade off the greenback," he added. "We will be witnessing a comeback to more fundamental based trading this year."
The world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust <GLD>, said its holdings stood at 1,112.836 tonnes as of Jan. 18, unchanged from the previous day. [
]Holdings of the trust, the world's sixth largest holder of gold ahead of China, Japan and Switzerland, have declined nearly 21 tonnes so far this year, compared to a rise of some 15 tonnes in the same period of 2009. [
]Meanwhile gold traders in major bullion consumer India remained on the sidelines on Tuesday as high prices put off buyers, dealers said.
Among other precious metals, silver <XAG=> prices were at $18.56 an ounce versus $18.61 an ounce late on Monday.
(Additional reporting by Chikako Mogi)
(Reporting by Michael Taylor; Editing by Veronica Brown)