(Adds activity in physical sector)
By Lewa Pardomuan
SINGAPORE, Jan 15 (Reuters) - Gold rose on Tuesday and held near an historic high hit the previous day, reflecting investors' interest in the metal as the dollar dropped on expectations of half-percentage-point cut in U.S. rates.
Platinum hovered near record highs, silver kept within sight of a 27-year peak hit on Monday, while palladium stayed near a two-month high struck the previous day.
"Given the jitters from the credit crunch around the world, demand for safe-haven assets like gold is going to remain relatively high," said Craig James, chief economist at Commonwealth Securities in Sydney.
Spot gold <XAU=> rose to $909.10/909.90 an ounce from $902.10/902.80 an ounce late in New York. Bullion touched an all-time high of $914 an ounce on Monday on investor buying driven by the dollar's slide and financial market turmoil.
"But certainly in the current environment, prices of $920 and $930 an ounce can't be ruled out. The U.S. dollar is probably going to remain weak on expectations of significant rate cuts in the U.S. to support growth," said James.
Gold's appeal as an alternative investment is increasing as the greenback comes under pressure on concerns that some of the largest U.S. banks will report weaker earnings this week -- raising expectations for further rate cuts.
Record high oil <CLc1> also ignited safe-haven buying against inflation.
Citigroup is the first in line among banks to report its fourth-quarter earnings, due on Tuesday. Markets will be watching for indications of how much the credit crisis is damaging the banks' bottom lines and increasing the risk of a recession. [
]The euro edged up to $1.4874 <EUR=> but was off Monday's peak of $1.4915, a seven-week high.
COMEX gold futures also hovered near a record high hit the previous day. The most active February contract <GCG8> gained $7.6 an ounce to $911.0 an ounce.
"All factors pointing to a more positive sentiment in the market remains," Albert Cheng, managing director, Far East, World Gold Council, told Reuters via e-mail.
"The price is being driven by a number of long and short-term factors, including a weak dollar and instability in the global financial markets, which play to gold's proven strengths as an inflation hedge, a dollar hedge and an insurance against extreme movements.
But in the physical sector, consumers turned their backs on jewellery shops in India after gold roared to a record high above $900 an ounce, curbing imports in the world's main buyer despite the busy wedding season. [
]The key gold futures contract for December 2008 delivery <0#JAU:> on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange (TOCOM) rose 13 yen per gram to 3,181 yen.
Platinum <XPT=> rose to $1,576.50/1,581.50 an ounce from $1,572/1,577 an ounce late in New York on Monday, when it spiked to a record high of $1,590 an ounce to track gold's rally.
Silver <XAG=> rose to $16.48/16.53 an ounce from $16.31/16.36 late in New York, but was off Monday's 27-year high of $16.58 an ounce.
Palladium <XPD=> fell to $375.50/380.50 an ounce from $379/384, but remained near Monday's two-month high of $380 an ounce. Precious metals prices at 0607 GMT Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Turnover Spot Gold 908.50 5.00 +0.55 9.10 Spot Silver 16.48 0.13 +0.80 11.58 Spot Platinum 1576.00 1.00 +0.06 3.68 Spot Palladium 375.50 -0.50 -0.13 2.04 TOCOM Gold 3182.00 14.00 +0.44 3.99 69160 TOCOM Platinum 5377.00 -6.00 -0.11 0.71 29861 TOCOM Silver 575.80 1.60 +0.28 6.43 1341 TOCOM Palladium 1340.00 0.00 +0.00 -0.81 398 Euro/Dollar 1.4865 Dollar/Yen 107.85 TOCOM prices in yen per gram, except TOCOM silver which is priced in yen per 10 grams. Spot prices in $ per ounce. (Editing by Ben Tan)