* Gold treads water ahead of non-farm payrolls at 1230 GMT
* Central Bank Gold Agreement renewed for five-year term
* South African union, Eskom hope to avoid strike
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By Jan Harvey
LONDON, Aug 7 (Reuters) - Gold held around $960 an ounce on Friday, drifting slightly lower as the dollar recovered early losses against a currency basket, but trading was muted ahead of key U.S. non-farm payrolls data due later in the session.
The numbers are seen as a key indicator of the strength of any economic recovery, analysts said.
Spot gold <XAU=> was bid at $960.20 an ounce at 1113 GMT, against $962.15 late in New York on Thursday. U.S. gold futures for December delivery <GCZ9> on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange were up 10 cents at $962.90.
"The general consensus is that non-farm payrolls are going to be slightly lower than last month, which should support U.S. equities and we should see more dollar weakness... which would be positive for gold," said Standard Bank analyst Walter de Wet.
"But if it comes in higher than expected, we'll see more treasuries buying, equities down (and) some dollar strength as well," he added. "That would be gold negative."
The precious metal drifted a touch lower as the dollar <.DXY> recovered its early losses against a basket of six major currencies. Currency traders are eyeing the jobs data as a key gauge of the sustainability of the recent risk rally. [
]Caution permeated other markets, with European shares edging lower after a dip in Asian stocks overnight and crude prices also weaker, denting interest in gold as a hedge against oil-led inflation. [
] [ ] [ ]Demand for gold to back exchange-traded funds remained lacklustre, with holdings of the largest, New York's SPDR Gold Trust <GLD>, unchanged for a sixth session. [
]Gold trade in India, the world's largest bullion consumer last year, remained muted as most banks, the primary sellers of gold, were on strike for a second day. [
]
CBGA RENEWED
In supply news, the European Central Bank said a group of central banks in Europe have renewed the Central Bank Gold Agreement, a pact to limit gold sales for a five-year period. [
]The sales ceiling for signatories of the pact has been reduced to 400 tonnes a year from 500 tonnes previously, and a planned sale of 403 tonnes of gold by the International Monerary Fund will be accommodated within this limit, the ECB said.
"It is not a surprise at all that there is a new Central Bank Gold Agreement ... if only to allow the accommodation of the IMF sales," said Stephen Briggs, a commodity strategist with RBS Global Banking & Markets.
Elsewhere South Africa's biggest union and state power firm Eskom voiced hopes ahead of talks on Friday that a strike that could paralyse the country will be averted. [
]South Africa is the world's third biggest gold miner, the number two palladium producer and by far the largest source of platinum globally. Talk of a strike took platinum and palladium prices to multi-month highs earlier in the week.
"There's been a lot of buying (of platinum group metals) on this since Monday," said de Wet. "Our general view was that strikes to the extent power will be disrupted are highly unlikely."
Spot platinum <XPT=> was at $1,233 an ounce against $1,260, late on Thursday while palladium <XPD=> was at $266.50 against $269.50. Silver <XAG=> was at $14.63 an ounce against $14.54. (Additional reporting by Catherine Bosley; Editing by Peter Blackburn)