* Dollar recovers losses against the euro <EUR=> * Indian demand wanes after festival season * Rhodium prices reach highest in a year at $1,800/oz
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By Jan Harvey
LONDON, Oct 21 (Reuters) - Gold prices slipped towards $1,050 an ounce in Europe on Wednesday as the dollar recovered its earlier losses against the euro, curbing interest in the metal as an alternative to the U.S. currency.
With physical demand for the metal from jewellers and investors in exchange-traded funds still lacklustre, gold is at the mercy of the currency markets, traders said.
Spot gold <XAU=> was bid at $1,051.80 an ounce at 1212 GMT against $1,054.00 late in New York on Tuesday. U.S. gold futures for December delivery <GCZ9> on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange eased $5.90 to $1,052.70 an ounce.
Prices have been tracking the euro-dollar exchange rate, with gold reaching record highs of $1,070.40 last week as the dollar hit its lowest in over a year versus the single currency.
"Gold does not seem to have a mind of its own," said Afshin Nabavi, head of trading at MKS Finance in Geneva. "It all depends on the euro."
He said the $1,050 level was providing solid support for prices. Despite the gains in gold over the last month, relatively little scrap is coming back onto the market, compared with the record levels seen earlier this year, he said. The dollar pared losses against the euro <EUR=> on Wednesday as declining oil prices and weaker equity markets curbed interest in currencies seen as higher risk. [
]Traders are closely watching the progress of stock markets, with any decline expected to weigh on risk appetite and dent the appeal of higher-yielding currencies.
European shares fell on Wednesday, weighed down by financial stocks after a quarterly earnings report from Deutsche Bank underwhelmed investors. U.S. stock index futures fell after Boeing reported disappointing quarterly results. [
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OIL FALLS
Oil prices fell more than 1 percent to below $78 a barrel after hefty gains earlier in the week took it to one-year highs. [
] Strength in crude prices tends to benefit gold, which can be bought as a hedge against oil-led inflation.Physical demand for gold remained slow as high prices put off buyers. In India, the world's biggest gold consumer last year, buyers stuck to the sidelines as demand linked to last week's festival period petered out.
"Demand is very dull as Diwali/Dhanteras is over," said an official from a state-run bullion-dealing bank. [
]Among other precious metals, spot silver <XAG=> was at $17.41 an ounce against $17.45. Platinum and palladium prices also fell as gold's recent gains faded and traders worried about the demand outlook for the metals used in catalytic converters.
"Overall, we remain constructive on platinum group metals, but we would not add longs for platinum and palladium, given that we see a possible correction in gold," Standard Bank said in a note.
Japanese and Korean carmakers have seen improved quarterly earnings as government incentive schemes boost car sales, but currency swings are a risk, they said. [
]However, European automakers' shares fell as investors worried how the sector would cope when incentive schemes run out. [
]Platinum <XPT=> was at $1,345.50 an ounce against $1,347, while palladium <XPD=> fell to $328.80 from $334.
ETF Securities saw an inflow of nearly 5,100 ounces into its ETFS Physical Platinum exchange-traded commodity on Tuesday, lifting its total holdings 1.4 percent, it said.
Fellow autocatalyst material rhodium <RHOD-LON> rose $50 an ounce to $1,800 an ounce, its highest level in a year. (Editing by Sue Thomas)