* Drop to 7-wk lows drawing some bargain hunting
* Bear trend in near term, but spike up possible in thin mkt
By Chikako Mogi
TOKYO, Dec 24 (Reuters) - Gold prices inched up to $1,100 per ounce on Thursday as a recent drop to seven-week lows spurred some bargain hunting in a holiday-thinned market.
Traders said the market was in a downtrend in the near-term, but that buying from Asian investors in the dip could lift prices above $1,100 before London opens for a half-day later.
Prices could then be capped as London players often use a rise in Asian trading hours to take profits, market players said.
"There are some Asian bargain hunters who helped push prices higher, particularly in the thin market," said Wakako Harada, a senior trader at Mitsubishi Corp in Tokyo.
"I thought the market could fall a bit more, but short-term players appear to be buying around $1,080. But prices are likely to see resistance around $1,100 given that the market is in a near-term downtrend," she said.
Spot gold <XAU=> rose 1.3 percent to $1,101.50 as of 0620 GMT, compared to New York's notional close of $1,087.00 per ounce. It fell to a 7-week low of $1,074.10 an ounce on Tuesday.
The precious metal rose nearly 1 percent on Wednesday, when the dollar gave up ground to the euro after news that sales of U.S. single-family homes slid to a seven-month low in November called into question optimism a day earlier that sent gold to a 7-week trough.
The 11.3 percent drop in newly built U.S. home sales dealt a blow to the housing market's recovery. [
]U.S. gold futures for February delivery <GCG0> inched up 0.5 percent to $1,100.00, compared to $1,094.00 an ounce on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. Futures also hit a 7-week low of $1,075.20 on Tuesday.
The weakness in the market halted flows into gold investment.
The world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust <GLD>, said its holdings stood at 1,132.708 tonnes as of Dec. 23, unchanged from the previous business day and staying just below a record high of 1,134.03 tonnes hit on June 1. [
]The world's largest silver-backed exchange-traded fund, iShares Silver Trust <SLV>, said its silver holdings stood at 9,492.97 tonnes as of Dec. 23, unchanged from the previous business day, after easing from a record high of 9,514.35 tonnes on Dec. 22. [
]The dollar hovered just below the week's peaks on Thursday, after falling for the first time in five sessions against the euro the day before. [
]Precious metals prices at 0623 GMT Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Turnover Spot Gold 1101.00 14.00 +1.29 25.09 Spot Silver 17.30 0.21 +1.23 52.83 Spot Platinum 1441.00 22.50 +1.59 54.61 Spot Palladium 365.50 10.00 +2.81 98.10 Euro/Dollar 1.4352 Dollar/Yen 91.31 Spot prices in $ per ounce. (Editing by Joseph Radford)