(Updates prices, adds quotes)
By Lewa Pardomuan
SINGAPORE, April 14 (Reuters) - Gold fell more than 1 percent on Monday as the U.S. dollar jumped against other currencies after the Group of Seven meeting, prompting investors to trim their positions in bullion and other precious metals.
Platinum fell 3 percent to below $2,000, silver dropped more than 2 percent, while platinum also tumbled 3 percent.
Gold <XAU=> hit a low of $914.10 an ounce, down from $924.60/925.40 late in New York on Friday and well below a record high of $1,030.80 an ounce hit on March 17.
A failure to stay above key resistance of $930 also prompted selling from investors, who now await this week's U.S. data which include retail sales, producer prices and consumer prices, and quarterly earnings announcements by U.S. banks.
"There's some selling pressure on the market. It's reacting to the dollar. I think that's the only reason," said Ronald Leung, director of Lee Cheong Gold Dealers in Hong Kong.
"There's not much physical buying. If it goes down to $900 or below, of course it will attract some buying," said Leung, who expected gold to trade in a volatile $880 to $930 ounce range in coming days.
The euro hit a low of $1.5658 <EUR=>, down from around $1.5810 in late U.S. trading after the Group of Seven major industrialised countries surprised speculators by expressing concern about excessive fluctuations in currencies.
In theory, a surging dollar reduces gold's appeal as an alternative investment to stocks, currencies and bonds.
Platinum <XPT=> fell as low as $1,940 an ounce, down from $2,002/2,007 late in New York to track weaker gold and as speculators liquidated positions in Tokyo futures. Platinum hovered well below a record high of $2,290 hit on March 4.
"Active liquidation emerged as platinum struggled to rise strongly above $2,000. Sharp falls in equities were giving a cautious mood," said Shuji Sugata, manager at Mitsubishi Corp Futures and Securities in Tokyo.
"The market wants to pull out from risky assets ahead of announcements of earning results by several U.S. investment banks this week," Sugata said.
The most active Tokyo platinum futures <0#JPL:> fell 273 yen per gram to 6,187 yen but off an intraday low of 6,163 yen. The contract struck a record high of 7,427 yen on March 6.
Gold futures for June delivery <GCM8> on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange fell $6.4 an ounce to $920.6 an ounce
Silver <XAG=> dropped to $17.33/17.38 an ounce from $17.75/17.80 an ounce. Spot palladium <XPD=> fell to $456/461 an ounce from $466/474 an ounce. Precious metals prices at 0416 GMT Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Turnover Spot Gold 917.10 -7.80 -0.84 10.14 Spot Silver 17.33 -0.41 -2.31 17.33 Spot Platinum 1942.00 -50.50 -2.53 27.76 Spot Palladium 456.00 -10.00 -2.15 23.91 TOCOM Gold 3006.00 -48.00 -1.57 -1.76 34004 TOCOM Platinum 6181.00 -279.00 -4.32 15.77 18897 TOCOM Silver 567.50 -25.40 -4.28 4.90 725 TOCOM Palladium 1512.00 -36.00 -2.33 11.92 1133 Euro/Dollar 1.5701 Dollar/Yen 101.13 TOCOM prices in yen per gram, except TOCOM silver which is priced in yen per 10 grams. Spot prices in $ per ounce.
(Additional reporting by Chikafumi Hodo in Tokyo; Editing by)