(Changes description of crisis in headline to financial from economic)
By Anna Ringstrom
LONDON, March 17 (Reuters) - Gold prices shot up to record highs on Monday as investors fled to safe haven assets on the back of deepening worries about the U.S. financial sector and new lows for the dollar.
Spot gold <XAU=> traded at $1,023.95/1,025.00 an ounce at 1137 GMT after hitting a high of $1,030.80. On Friday, it closed at $996.90/997.70 in New York.
"The current macro-economic backdrop, particularly in the United States, is bringing new buyers into the gold market. The downward pressure on the dollar and general uncertainty are supporting the market," said Michael Widmer, analyst at Lehman Brothers.
"What is really important for this week is to see what the Fed is doing," he said.
The U.S. Federal Reserve unexpectedly cut its discount rate on Sunday and opened up discount window lending to major investment banks -- a tool not used since the Great Depression -- in a sign of its deep concern over the current crisis.
Investors also expect the Fed could slash overnight rates by up to 125 basis points by the end of its meeting on Tuesday.
JPMorgan Chase & Co <JPM.N> said on Sunday it would buy stricken rival Bear Stearns <BSC.N> for just $2 a share in a deal that values the U.S. investment bank at about $236 million. [
]But these measures didn't restore investors' confidence.
Instead, the dollar tumbled to a record low against the euro <EUR=> on worries there would be more casualties in the widening U.S. financial crisis.
A weaker dollar makes gold cheaper for holders of other currencies and often lifts bullion demand. The metal is also generally seen as a hedge against oil-led inflation.
The financial jitters propelled oil to a record high.
DOLLAR IN FOCUS
James Moore, analyst at TheBulliondesk.com, said the dollar could come under further pressure depending on the outcome of U.S. macroeconomic data later in the day and the Fed's rate decision on Tuesday.
"However given the likelihood of further rate cuts at this week's FOMC meeting, we remain bullish towards gold and anticipate the metal could test as high as $1,150 this quarter as investors seek to offset rising safe-haven/inflationary concerns," Moore said in a research note.
"As long as financial markets are driven by angst and panic, gold is likely to remain firm," he said.
Gold's attraction as an alternative investment has helped boost price by over 23 percent this year alone. It gained 32 percent in 2007.
Gold hit $850 an ounce in 1980, lifted by a combination of high inflation linked to strong oil prices, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the impact of the Iranian revolution.
After adjusting for inflation, the 1980 high is equivalent to $2,119.30 an ounce at 2007 prices. The average for the whole of 1980 has been calculated at $1,532.14, according to precious metals consultancy GFMS Ltd.
In other metals, silver <XAG=> set a new 27-year high at $21.24 and was last traded at $20.99/21.04 an ounce, up from $20.63/20.68 in New York.
Platinum <XPT=> fell to $2,005/2,025 from $2,070/2,080 an ounce in New York. Palladium <XPD=> declined to $488/493 an ounce from $509/514.
(Editing by Chris Johnson)