* Gold rises on weak dollar, record oil prices
* SPDR Gold Trust gold holdings rise 2.5 pct
(Recasts, changes dateline, pvs SINGAPORE)
By Jan Harvey
LONDON, June 30 (Reuters) - Gold climbed on Monday as the dollar slipped to a one-month low against a basket of currencies and as oil reached a record high, fuelling buying of the precious metal as an inflation hedge.
A stock market slide last week also benefited commodities as an asset class as traders sought alternative investments, analysts said.
Gold <XAU=> was at $932.50/933.50 an ounce at 0948 GMT, up from $927.20/928.20 an ounce late in New York on Friday. Earlier it touched a session high of $934.55 an ounce, its firmest level since May 22.
"The dollar looks pretty weak, and financial risk is rising," said Standard Bank analyst Walter de Wet.
"Equities doing so badly over the last week has been good for commodities in general, and in terms of credit, default spreads have been rising," he added. "That supports gold."
"We will probably see gold closing higher today than it did in the last session," he said.
The dollar, which wilted last week after the U.S. Federal Reserve adopted a less hawkish tone than expected on interest rates, slid to a one-month low on Monday, battered by weak equities, strong oil and weak U.S. consumer confidence. [
]A softer dollar tends to benefit gold, which is often bought as a hedge against weakness in the U.S. currency. A weaker greenback makes dollar-priced commodities cheaper for holders of other currencies.
The other main external driver of gold, oil, also supported gold, as it hit a new record of $142.94 a barrel on rising tension between Iran and Israel and as the dollar softened.
Rising crude prices boost gold's appeal as a hedge against oil-led inflation, as well as fuelling investment interest in commodities in general.
Investor sentiment towards gold remains positive, with the quantity of the precious metal held by SPDR Gold Trust <GLD>, the world's largest bullion-backed exchange-traded fund, rising by 2.5 percent on Friday. [
]SPDR, which launched a new listing on the Tokyo Stock Exchange on Monday, now holds 644.16 tonnes of gold.
In supply news, South Africa's Gold Fields <GFIJ.J>, the world's fourth largest gold miner, said it had lost 70 kg of production due to the closure of its Kloof mine for two days last week. [
]The miner shut its No. 4 shaft after an earth tremor killed two miners at the pit on Thursday. Blasting at the entire mine was also halted on Friday.
Among other precious metals, spot platinum <XPT=> rose to $2,064.00/2,084.00 an ounce from $2,053.50/2,073.50 late in New York.
Lonmin PLC <LMI.L>, the world's third largest platinum producer, said it has closed down one of its furnaces for a week due to a leak in one of its coolers. [
]While the company has said it is still assessing the impact of the closure on production, Fairfax IS analyst John Meyer said the outage was helping support platinum prices.
Spot palladium <XPD=> rose to $465.00/473.00 an ounce from $463.00/471.00 an ounce. Speculators booked profits after the price jumped to a three-month high of $477 on June 19.
Silver <XAG=> rose to $17.77/17.82 an ounce from $17.52/17.61 late in New York. The largest silver ETF listed in New York, the iShares Silver Trust <SLV.A>, said its holdings edged up to 6,002.41 tonnes on June 26 from 5,971.63 tonnes.
(Reporting by Jan Harvey; editing by Christopher Johnson)