* Investors eye Fed, BOJ meetings for direction in gold
* Gold inches up, trades close to last week's 13-month peak
(Updates prices)
By Naveen Thukral
SINGAPORE, March 14 (Reuters) - Gold bounced back on Monday,
inching closer to last week's 13-month high, ahead of crucial
policy meetings at the U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of
Japan that are likely to provide direction to the yellow metal.
Spot gold XAU= had risen 0.6 percent to $1,255.30 an ounce
by 0643 GMT, while U.S. gold GCcv1 eased 0.2 percent to
$1,256.5 an ounce.
The main focus is the U.S. Fed's policy meeting on March
15-16, after the central bank lifted rates for the first time in
nearly a decade in December.
Investors in the precious metals market are also keeping a
watch on the Bank of Japan meet.
The BOJ's policy board is set to discuss this week whether
to exempt $90 billion in short-term funds from its newly imposed
negative interest rate, people familiar with the matter said,
after the securities industry warned that investment money would
be driven into bank deposits.
"We have two central bank meetings this week as the BOJ
commence a two-day meeting today and the FOMC announce their
interest rate decision on Wednesday," said MKS Group trader Sam
Laughlin.
Support at $1,235 should keep the metal buoyant leading into
the Fed announcement, while $1,275-$1,280 will likely cap any
moves higher, the trader said.
After rolling out bold measures to boost the euro zone
economies, including increased asset-buying and a deeper cut to
deposit rates, ECB President Mario Draghi on Thursday signalled
there would be no further rate cuts.
The relatively weak dollar and a repricing of expectations
for U.S. interest rate rises have helped gold rebound by more
than 18 percent this year.
Bullion regained its role as a shelter for risk-averse
investors in the face of tumbling equities and fears of a global
economic slowdown.
Hedge funds and money managers increased their bullish
position in COMEX gold to the highest in 13 months in the week
to March 8, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data
showed on Friday, as safe-haven buying lifted prices to the
highest since February 2015.
Physical gold demand slowed in top consumer China last week,
while a strike by jewellers protesting against the imposition of
a tax curbed demand in India, the No. 2 market. GOL/AS