SINGAPORE, Jan 13 (Reuters) - Gold lost more ground on
Wednesday as a rebound in U.S. and European equity markets
reduced some of the precious metal's safe haven appeal with
additional pressure from a strengthening greenback.
FUNDAMENTALS
* Spot gold XAU= slid 0.3 percent to $1,086.9 an ounce by
0011 GMT and U.S. gold futures GCcv1 gained 0.1 percent to
$1,086.7.
* A late rebound in energy and biotech shares helped push
the S&P 500 to a second straight day of gains on Tuesday, while
Apple (O:AAPL) and other technology shares also boosted the market. The
pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index .FTEU3 climbed 1.1 percent
after four sessions of declines.
* The metal's rally in early January to a nine-week top has
run out of steam as expectations of further U.S. interest rate
increase lowers demand for the non-interest-paying asset, while
boosting the dollar.
* The dollar rose for a third straight session on Tuesday as
gains on Wall Street and calmer financial markets enhanced
appetite for currencies that offer higher yield.
* The Fed raised rates in December and attention has shifted
to how many hikes will follow in 2016.
* Holdings of the world's largest gold-backed
exchange-traded fund, New York-listed SPDR Gold Shares (N:GLD), rose 2.1
tonnes on Monday, data from the fund showed. GOL/ETF
* Among other precious metals, palladium XPD= fell for a
third straight session to $467.30 an ounce after sliding to a
5-1/2 year low of $449.55 an ounce on Tuesday.
* Silver XAG= was almost unchanged at $13.795 an ounce,
while platinum XPT= lost 0.2 percent to $835.1 an ounce.
* For the top stories on metals and other news, click
TOP/MTL or GOL
MARKET NEWS
* U.S. and European stock investors bought beaten-down
shares on Tuesday, at least temporarily looking past another
steep drop in oil prices that briefly sent U.S. crude below $30
a barrel. MKTS/GLOB
* Oil fell briefly below the widely watched $30-per-barrel
level on Tuesday, extending a selloff that has sliced almost 20
percent off prices this year amid deepening concerns about
fragile Chinese demand and the absence of output restraint.
O/R
DATA AHEAD (GMT)
China Trade data Dec
1000 Euro zone Industrial output Nov
1900 U.S. Federal budget Dec
*No exact timing for China trade data