* Dollar hits multi-month lows versus euro, sterling, others
* Rising oil, industrial metal prices fuel inflation fears
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By Jan Harvey
LONDON, June 1 (Reuters) - Gold rose to three-month highs on Monday as investors bought bullion because of dollar weakness and the prospect of higher inflation in the future, while expectations of economic recovery grew.
Analysts expect government measures to boost liquidity in the financial markets may lead to soaring prices once economic activity picks up.
Spot gold <XAU=> was bid at $982.60 an ounce at 1150 GMT, compared with a session high of $988.50 and $978.20 late in New York on Friday. Analysts say a return to February's high of $1,005.40 an ounce is in sight.
"The dollar is still under pressure, and commodities generally are upbeat at the moment," said Simon Weeks, director of precious metals at the Bank of Nova Scotia. "People are definitely buying hard assets as opposed to hard currencies."
Gold is an attractive investment both to those who believe the economy is on track for recovery and those who think there may be more trouble ahead, he said.
"If things are getting better... it will go along as part of the commodities sector, (but) there is enough concern out there that some safe haven buying is also coming back in," he said.
The dollar slid broadly, hitting multi-month lows against commodity-related currencies such as the Australian dollar as well as the euro and sterling, as optimism about the economy boosted currencies perceived to be riskier. [
]Currency traders will be closely watching U.S. data due later this week, starting with the ISM manufacturing survey on Monday and culminating in key May non-farm payrolls numbers on Friday, for its influence on the dollar.
"The confluence of negative factors for the U.S. dollar looks destined to keep it on the back foot over the coming week," said Calyon currency analysts.
Data showing Chinese industrial activity expanded in May helped offset news of GM's preparation for bankruptcy, fuelling gains in industrial commodities and boosting world stock markets to their highest in seven months. [
] [ ]SUSTAINED HOPES
Oil rose nearly 2 percent to a new seven-month high as stock market optimism and sustained hopes for an economic recovery extended its biggest monthly gains in a decade. [
]Rising crude prices typically boost buying of gold as a hedge against oil-led inflation and raise interest in commodities as an asset class.
While inflation fears and currencies are boosting interest in gold, buying of jewellery and bullion-backed exchange traded funds remains relatively lacklustre. [
] [ ]Data released Friday showed a hefty rise in speculative net long positions on New York's COMEX futures exchange. However, this may leave gold vulnerable to a correction as such positions are easily liquidated, analysts said. [
]"It is worth noting that speculators on COMEX are now very long," said UBS analyst John Reade in a note. "With no sign of strong inflows into the ETFs, the dollar must weaken further for gold to make more ground."
Silver <XAG=> tracked gold higher, rising to a near 10-month high of $15.94 an ounce. Later the metal was bid at $15.85 an ounce against $15.74.
Among other precious metals, platinum <XPT=> was bid at $1,217.50 an ounce against $1,187 late in New York on Friday, while palladium <XPD=> was at $236 an ounce against $234.
"Platinum prices were buoyed by U.S. dollar weakness and the rally in the broader commodities sector," HSBC said in a note. (Additional reporting by Pratima Desai; editing by Anthony Barker)