By Clara Denina
LONDON (Reuters) - Gold steadied around $1,330 an ounce on Friday and was on track for its biggest monthly gain in seven as persistent concerns about a slowdown in the U.S. economy hurt the dollar.
Gold has gained nearly 7 percent in February, its biggest monthly rise since July, mostly due to weak data in China and the United States and political and economic turmoil in Ukraine, which lifted demand for the metal as an insurance against risk.
"In general whether it's Ukraine, the U.S. economic data or worries about China, there seem to be a lot more reasons than there were six weeks ago for looking at gold," Nomura analyst Tyler Broda said.
Spot gold was down 0.1 percent at $1,329.58 an ounce by 1453 GMT, below a four-month high of $1,345.35 struck on Wednesday.
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U.S. gold futures for April delivery fell $2.00 $1,329.80 an ounce.
The dollar dropped 0.5 percent versus a basket of main currencies, mostly due to euro strength after euro zone inflation data came in above expectations, easing pressure on the European Central Bank to loosen monetary policy next week.
U.S. data on Friday showed fourth-quarter growth expanded at a 2.4 percent annual rate, down sharply from the 3.2 percent pace reported last month. Separately, the pace of business activity in the U.S. Midwest rose slightly in February, beating expectations.
In her testimony to the U.S. Senate Banking Committee on Thursday, Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen acknowledged unusually harsh winter weather was behind recent signs of weakness in the U.S. economy, suggesting the central bank was poised to press forward in ratcheting back its stimulus.
The Fed trimmed its monthly bond purchases by $10 billion at each of its previous two meetings. Its next meeting is scheduled for March 19.
"The next Fed meeting is really the key because by then some of the economic data should have unambiguously not been weather affected and if that still shows a slowdown the Fed might have to change their policy again, which doesn't necessarily mean an end of tapering but may mean some other loosening," Macquarie analyst Matthew Turner said.
PHYSICAL SLOWDOWN
The physical market was quiet in Singapore, a centre for bullion trading in Southeast Asia.
Premiums for gold bars in Hong Kong dipped to $1 an ounce to
the spot London prices from as high as $1.70 last week, which reflected a slowdown in demand from China.
Weakening differentials between 99.99 percent purity gold on the Shanghai Gold Exchange and cash gold discouraged imports. On Friday, the Shanghai market was trading at discounts to almost on par with cash gold.
Silver rose 0.2 percent to $21.28 an ounce. Platinum was up 0.4 percent to $1,450.00 an ounce and palladium gained 0.5 percent at $742.25 an ounce.
The platinum group metals had risen about 1.5 percent after the second biggest platinum miner Impala Platinum
(Additional reporting by Lewa Pardomuan in Singapore; Editing by William Hardy and David Evans)


