(Updates prices, adds closing in Tokyo)
By Lewa Pardomuan
SINGAPORE, March 31 (Reuters) - Gold jumped up on Monday with the help of bargain hunters, but gains may be capped by oil's fall to below $105 a barrel, which robbed the metal of some of its appeal as a hedge against inflation.
Gold <XAU=> climbed to $938.00/938.90 an ounce from $931.80/932.60 an ounce late in the U.S. market on Friday, when it dropped more than 2 percent on falling crude oil.
Gold has lost more than 9 percent in value since spiking to an all-time high of $1,030.80 an ounce on March 17. Record high oil and expectations of further interest rate cuts in the United States have propelled bullion to a lifetime high.
But analysts said gold's fundamentals were intact amid supply constraints -- heightened recently by a power crisis that has disrupted mining in South Africa, the world's main platinum producer and the second-largest gold producer after China.
"We have very strong supply and demand fundamentals. It takes two, three or four years to build a mine, so you can't just turn a tap and produce more commodities," said Evy Hambro, managing director at BlackRock Merrill Lynch Investment Managers.
"We expect commodity prices to remain at high levels. I would say the gold prices are going to continue to be in a positive direction. Supply-side constraints will also continue to support the price of of gold and other commodities," he told a news conference.
Gold futures for June delivery <GCM8> on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange added $6.5 an ounce to $943.0 an ounce, having fallen 1.83 percent at the close on Friday.
Dealers awaited Friday's jobs report, in which U.S. employers are expected to have cut payrolls for a third straight month during March. The data offer may offer more clues on the on the state of the economy and the outlook for interest rates
"We can say there's some bargain hunters at $930 and below. It attracts some buying interest. There seems to be a little bit physical buying at the low," said Ronald Leung, director of Lee Cheong in Hong Kong.
Oil <CLc1> fell more than $1 after the restart of a crude pipeline system in Iraq eased fears of an extended exports disruption from the country's oil-rich south. [
]"Serious movements in gold may only happen tomorrow on the first day of the new quarter and month. If gold was to crash again, it should not go below $887," said a dealer in Singapore.
"Gold may retry the $1,000 level a couple of times before making a break through to form a new base above $1,000 in the next six months."
In currencies, the dollar inched up against a basket of currencies as many investors closed their books for the business year and awaited more clues on the health of the U.S economy from data due later this week.
The dollar edged up to 99.90 yen <JPY=> from late U.S. trade on Friday. It had jumped to 100.20 yen from a low of 98.80 yen touched earlier in the session on electronic trading platform EBS.
Spot platinum <XPT=> rose to $2,030/2,040 an ounce from $2,000/2,010 an ounce. It jumped to its highest in more than a week at $2,040 on Friday on speculative buying as supply fears lingered in South Africa.
The most active Tokyo platinum futures <0#JPL:> ended 16 yen per gram lower at 6,374 yen as speculators closed their books for the fiscal year.
Silver <XAG=> firmed to $17.94/17.99 an ounce from $17.88/17.93 an ounce. Spot palladium <XPD=> rose to $443/448 an ounce from $441/445. Precious metals prices at 0837 GMT Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Turnover Spot Gold 937.50 7.50 +0.81 12.59 Spot Silver 17.96 0.08 +0.45 21.60 Spot Platinum 2030.00 30.00 +1.50 33.55 Spot Palladium 443.00 2.00 +0.45 20.38 TOCOM Gold 3026.00 -26.00 -0.85 -1.11 56799 TOCOM Platinum 6374.00 -16.00 -0.25 19.39 16362 TOCOM Silver 579.90 -9.40 -1.60 7.19 1360 TOCOM Palladium 1467.00 12.00 +0.82 8.59 2735 Euro/Dollar 1.5795 Dollar/Yen 99.29 TOCOM prices in yen per gram, except TOCOM silver which is priced in yen per 10 grams. Spot prices in $ per ounce. (Editing by Ben Tan)