* Oil bounce fuels inflation fears
* Banking fears remain supportive
* Platinum slips to lowest level since early May
(Recasts, adds comment, updates prices, adds detail)
By David Sheppard
LONDON, July 17 (Reuters) - Gold recovered on Thursday after a rebound in oil prices boosted buying of the precious metal as a hedge against fuel-led inflation.
Spot gold rebounded to hit a day high of $972.90, having slipped as low as $953.200 earlier in the day when oil prices dipped. At 1456 GMT, spot gold was trading at $971.70/972.70 against $963.10/964.10 in late New York trades on Wednesday.
On Tuesday, gold hit a four-month high of $987.75 an ounce after rallying on concerns over the stability of the U.S. financial system, with investors looking for a safe store of wealth during times of uncertainty.
"Gold's mainly been tracking oil and the dollar today, having risen largely on banking concerns over the past week," said Standard Chartered trader Tony Dopra.
"I think we could see it break higher due to the inflationary and negative economic news coming out."
Gold tends to trade in the opposite direction to the dollar and in line with oil, as it serves as an alternative asset to the U.S. currency and as a hedge against fuel-led inflation.
Bank stocks in the United States and Europe have recovered over the past couple of days, but analysts say many investors remain concerned about financial risks.
"The longer-term trend for gold is still intact," said Merrill Lynch analyst Daniel Hynes.
Platinum fell to its lowest level since early May after South African state-owned power utility Eskom said it was confident the country would go through the winter months without power cuts.
Energy shortages in the world's number one platinum producer have boosted prices this year due to concerns mine output would be constrained.
"We have become somewhat concerned about the short to medium-term view for the platinum group metals," JPMorgan said in a note. "A pullback towards $1,800 an ounce in platinum looks likely in the medium term, while palladium looks like it could trade towards $400 an ounce."
Spot-platinum hit a two-month low of $1,877.50 an ounce, before recovering slightly to trade at $1,898.50/1,918.50 from $1,913.50/1,933.50.
Sister metal palladium fell to $423.50/$431.50 from $430.50/438.50.
Silver was up at $19.07/19.13 from $18.71/18.80.
(Editing by Christopher Johnson)