* Safe-haven fades after Egypt's Mubarak steps down
* Gold slips from earlier 3-week high near $1,370/oz
* Largest silver ETF posts first inflow since Jan. 24
* Coming up: U.S. retail sales due on Tuesday (Recasts, updates prices, market activity; new byline, changes dateline, previously LONDON)
By Frank Tang
NEW YORK, Feb 11 (Reuters) - Gold retreated below $1,360 an ounce on Friday after the resignation of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak following weeks of protest took some heat out of risk aversion.
Despite Friday's decline, bullion posted its second consecutive weekly gain as fears that Egypt's unrest would spread across the Arab world had put a floor on gold prices, traders said.
Mubarak, the second Arab leader to be overthrown by a popular uprising in a month, handed power to the army after 18 days of relentless rallies against poverty, corruption and repression caused support from the armed forces to evaporate. [
]"The geopolitical risk and the incentive to buy gold on the back of that are probably reduced," said Hayden Atkins, an analyst at Macquarie. "Tension will still be simmering, but it won't be as big a news story for people to trade off."
Spot gold <XAU=> fell 0.3 percent to $1,359.20 an ounce by 1:28 p.m. EST (1828 GMT), having earlier risen to a three-week high of $1,368.16 an ounce. U.S. gold futures for April delivery <GCJ1> settled down $2.1 at $1,360.4.
Market watchers said gold remained supported by underlying safe-haven demand after Mubarak's resignation and the Tunisian uprising that toppled President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali in January, starting a chain reaction across the Arab world.
"The biggest question of course is if this (Mubarak's stepping down) will lead to problems elsewhere. I think that's what we need to focus on going forward, and that will keep gold steady," said Bill O'Neill, partner at commodities firm LOGIC Advisor.
The metal remained trapped between slackening appetite for bullion as interest in other assets such as stocks improved, and uncertainty over the economic outlook, Macquarie's Atkins said.
Gold fell 6 percent in January after a run of well-received U.S. data and easing worries about Europe's debt crisis shifted investor focus onto assets seen as higher-risk, but its slide has been arrested this month.
"There was a significant questioning with respect to gold whether there was really much further appreciation to be had," Deutsche Bank analyst Daniel Brebner said. "There were potentially a number of big gold investors questioning whether they should trim their positions.
ETF DEMAND STAYS SOFT
Investment demand for gold remained soft, with holdings of the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, New York's SPDR Gold Trust <GLD>, easing nearly a tonne on Thursday. They are down just over 55 tonnes so far this year. [
]In the same period of 2010, they fell around 27 tonnes.
"Consistent offloading by ETFs, who were pivotal in taking the metal beyond $1,400, and lacklustre physical demand are the key bearish forces curbing sustained gains," said Pradeep Unni, senior analyst at Richcomm Global Services.
Premiums for gold bars were steady in Hong Kong and Singapore, with no signs of buying interest from China after the Lunar New Year celebration. There was hardly any physical buying in Asia related to unrest in Egypt, dealers said. <GOLD/ASIA1>
Silver <XAG=> slipped 0.2 percent to $30.04 an ounce.
The tightest physical supplies in four years have tipped the U.S. silver futures market into backwardation this week, making near-term prices more expensive than more distant months. [
]Holdings in the world's largest silver ETF, the iShares Silver Trust <SLV>, rose around 18 tonnes to 10,388.45 tonnes on Thursday, their first increase since Jan. 24. [
]Platinum <XPT=> dropped 0.8 percent to $1,809.50 an ounce, while palladium <XPD=> lost 1.2 percent to $810.75. Prices at 1:59 p.m. EST (1859 GMT)
LAST/ NET PCT YTD
CLOSE CHG CHG CHG US gold <GCJ1> 1360.40 -2.10 -0.2% -4.3% US silver <SIH1> 29.995 -0.099 0.0% -3.0% US platinum <PLJ1> 1813.50 -17.30 -0.9% 2.0% US palladium <PAH1> 814.70 -6.20 -0.8% 1.4% Gold <XAU=> 1358.80 -4.10 -0.3% -4.3% Silver <XAG=> 29.96 -0.23 -0.8% -2.9% Platinum <XPT=> 1807.00 -17.75 -1.0% 2.2% Palladium <XPD=> 812.00 -8.25 -1.0% 1.6% Gold Fix <XAUFIX=> 1364.00 5.00 0.4% -3.3% Silver Fix <XAGFIX=> 30.00 20.00 0.7% -2.1% Platinum Fix <XPTFIX=> 1829.00 1.00 0.1% 5.7% Palladium Fix <XPDFIX=> 822.00 2.00 0.2% 3.9% (Additional reporting by Jan Harvey in London; Editing by Dale Hudson)