* Gold hits peak of $1,121.80/oz, highest since Nov 4
* Expectations for fewer rate hikes cause short-covering
* Fed meeting eyed for clues on future monetary policy
* Coming up: FOMC statement Wednesday at 1900 GMT
(Recasts, updates prices; adds comment, second byline, NEW YORK
dateline)
By Marcy Nicholson and Jan Harvey
NEW YORK/LONDON, Jan 26 (Reuters) - Gold rose to a 12-week
high on Tuesday, shrugging off strong stocks with nervous
investors moving into safe havens as the U.S. Federal Reserve
began a two-day meeting expected to give clues about the timing
of the next interest rate increase.
Spot gold XAU= was up 1.3 percent at $1,121.80 an ounce at
2:16 p.m. EST (1916 GMT), the highest since Nov. 4.
U.S. gold futures GCv1 for February delivery settled up
1.3 percent at $1,120.20 an ounce, the highest since early
November.
"I think what the market's hoping for is a dovish Fed," said
Rob Haworth, senior investment strategist for U.S. Bank Wealth
management in Seattle.
"You're getting a bit of a short-covering rally, some
safe-haven flows."
Still, Haworth said that expectations for lower inflation
make it hard to build a bullish case for gold.
Global stock markets and oil prices rose, while the U.S.
dollar .DXY fell 0.3 percent. MKTS/GLOB O/R
The Fed is expected to take notice of the macroeconomic
headwinds from China at its meeting, boosting hopes that it may
go easy on increasing interest rates further. It is widely
expected to leave its federal funds rate unchanged at 0.25-0.50
percent.
That bodes well for gold. Current ultra-low rates cut the
opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion, while keeping
a lid on the dollar, in which it is priced.
"We detect investor uncertainty that global financial
turbulence may impact the real economy," HSBC said in a note.
"If this impacts U.S. monetary policy, gold may be a
beneficiary. U.S. interest rate futures indicate the Fed may
only raise rates one more time this year."
The metal was also supported by technical signals after
closing on Monday above its 100-day moving average, a firm line
of resistance earlier this year.
"Fundamentals continue to turn more favorable with lower
bond yields, a slowing pace of U.S. rate hikes and under
invested funds all supporting the move higher," said Saxo Bank's
head of commodity research Ole Hansen.
China's net gold imports for December via main conduit Hong
Kong surged to the highest in more than two years, data showed,
as investors lost faith in collapsing stock markets and a
weakening currency and snapped up bullion.
Among other precious metals, platinum XPT= was up 1.9
percent at $874.51 an ounce, well off last week's seven-year
trough of $806.31. Palladium XPD= was up 0.5 percent at
$491.90, while silver XAG= was up 2 percent at $14.52.