* Gold poised for fresh gains as euro zone debt fears rankle
* Firmer dollar versus the euro limits gains in gold
* Silver, palladium reach multi-year highs
(Updates prices, adds comment)
By Jan Harvey
LONDON, Jan 3 (Reuters) - Gold rose to its highest in nearly a month in Europe on Monday, within $10 of its record high, and silver and palladium hit multi-year peaks, driven by pent-up demand on the first trading day of 2011.
While a firm dollar limited gains, expectations for more bad news on euro zone debt, concerns over potential inflation in developing economies and an increased focus on the U.S. deficit are set to maintain surging demand for gold, analysts said.
Spot gold <XAU=> rose to a peak of $1,423.57 an ounce, its highest since early December, and was bid at $1,419.90 an ounce at 1440 GMT, against $1,419.45 late in New York on Friday.
"Considering the overall expectations for the rally to continue, I could see a new high soon, as momentum will try to take it higher," said Ole Hansen, senior manager at Saxo Bank.
"Once that has been met, I would be a bit cautious, as the bow has been strung pretty far out on most markets, and we have the risk of a correction before the uptrend continues."
U.S. gold futures for February delivery <GCG1> fell 90 cents an ounce to $1,420.50. European trade is expected to remain quiet, with London still on holiday.
Pradeep Unni, a senior analyst at Richcomm Global Services in Dubai, said fresh highs in gold were likely this year, with an initial target seen at $1,455-$1,480, after trade in the metal was becalmed over the Christmas holidays.
"The fundamentals are driving the price, and those fundamentals remain fear-driven," he said.
"Gold (steps) into the New Year with all its current fundamentals intact ... sovereign debt risk, macro uncertainty, concerns over currency stability, medium-term inflation fears as the U.S. Federal Reserve implements Quantitative Easing II, geopolitical tensions and low interest rates."
EURO SLIPS
The euro fell 0.5 percent <EUR=> against the dollar early in the day, reversing year-end gains on persistent concerns about euro zone debt. [
]These worries can work both ways for gold. A weaker euro, and consequently stronger dollar, typically pressures gold prices, but concerns over sovereign debt are set to support demand for the metal as a haven from risk.
"(We look) for the gold market to start out 2011 on a strong note," said MF Global in an end-of-year report. "Support may come from a resumption of investment inflows and a renewed focus on European sovereign debt issues."
"Background support will be offered by quantitative ease, and improved (jewellery) demand," it added. "Negative factors will linger in the background as well but should be shelved in the midst of fresh investment this week."
The strong inverse relationship between gold and the dollar weakened to such an extent last year that gold prices managed to rise nearly 30 percent at the same time that the dollar rose more than 6.5 percent against the euro.
Among other precious metals, silver <XAG=> hit its highest since 1980 at $31.22 an ounce against $30.86 as investors continued to pick up the metal as a cheaper proxy for gold.
Platinum <XPT=> was at $1,779.74 an ounce against $1,767.50, and palladium <XPD=> at $802 against $799.50, having earlier touched its highest since March 2001 at $803 an ounce.
Palladium and silver were among the best-performing precious metals last year, up 97 percent and 83 percent respectively. Autocatalyst metal palladium is seen as the surer bet for 2011, however, on expectations its market balance will tighten. (Reporting by Jan Harvey; Editing by Alison Birrane)