* Gold underpinned by hopes of more central bank buying
                                 * SPDR Gold holdings inch up 0.5 pct
                                 * Platinum rises to highest since late August, 2008
                                 * http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/119/MKT_GLD$OIL1109.gif
                                 
                                 (Recasts, updates prices and comments, previous TOKYO)
                                 By Humeyra Pamuk
                                 LONDON, Nov 26 (Reuters) - Gold fell from a record high hit
earlier on Thursday as the dollar rebounded from its lows, but
the market was still expected to seek higher ground due to
prospects for central bank buying and further dollar weakness.
                                 Spot gold <XAU=> hit a record high of $1,194.90, but had
retreated to $1,182.70 an ounce by 1023 GMT versus its last
quote of $1,190.30 in New York late on Wednesday.
                                 "The sentiment towards gold is still very positive," said
Suki Cooper, analyst at Barclays Capital. She cautioned however
that prices could be subject to a short term correction.
                                 Bullion has gained more than 37 percent this year --
including a 13 percent rise in November alone on dollar
weakness, expectations of further reserve diversification by
central banks and fears of inflation next year.
                                 Late on Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund said it
had sold 10 tonnes of gold to the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, a
part of the 403.3 tonnes approved for sale by the fund's
executive board in September. The fund has already sold 202
tonnes to the central banks of India and Mauritius.
[]
                                 The dollar recovered some poise after hitting a 14-year low
against the yen as traders betting against the U.S. currency
cashed in on its recent slide. Against a basket of currencies,
the U.S. currency <.DXY> was up by 0.37 percent. []
                                 U.S. December gold futures <GCZ9> also rose to a fresh high
of $1,195.00 per ounce. Futures were last at $1,182.60 an ounce,
compared with $1,187.00 on the COMEX division of the New York
Mercantile Exchange.
                                 Gold has soared to new highs five times in the last ten
trading sessions, and three times this week.
                                 Traders said Dubai's move to restructure its biggest
corporate debtor, Dubai World and delay on some of the company's
$59 billion of liabilities had an indirect impact on gold as it
moved the dollar. []
                                 
                                 EVERYBODY BULLISH
                                 Central Banks, particularly in Asia, increasingly looking to
diversify their foreign exchange reserves after India's purchase
of 200 tonnes earlier this month is a major factor buoying the
yellow metal.
                                 "Everybody is bullish on gold, and everybody is looking at
the signal central banks are sending," said Dick Poon, manager
of precious metals at Heraeus in Hong Kong.
                                 "It's not just India or China...everybody is looking at how
much money they will invest in gold," he said.
                                 Any decision on whether India would buy more gold from the
IMF would be taken by the Reserve Bank of India, Indian finance
ministry official Anup Pujari, joint secretary for multilateral
institutions, told Reuters on Thursday. []
                                 For a graphic of reserves held by India and China, click:
 http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/119/IN_CHRSV1109.gif
                                 Poon said there was a lot of physical demand despite high
prices, with Asian buyers seen in the market.
                                 For a timeline on gold prices, click:
http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/119/GLD/GLD_TMLN1109.html
                                 "Reserve diversification moves by non-G7 central banks
underscore investor detachment from U.S. dollar assets and is
clearly reflected in gold's rally," said Shuji Sugata, a manager
at Mitsubishi Corp Futures research team.
                                 U.S. markets will be closed on Thursday for the Thanksgiving
holiday. Traders said volume was not large, with many players
kept to the sidelines due to the Thanksgiving holiday.
                                 Gold's rally pulled other precious metals higher, with
platinum <XPT=> rising as high as $1,480.00 per ounce, its
highest since late August, 2008.
                                 Silver <XAG=> was at $18.42 an ounce versus $18.82 an ounce
while palladium <XPD=> was at $367.50 an ounce versus $370 an
ounce on Wednesday.
                                 (Additional reporting by Chikako Mogi in Tokyo, Editing by
Veronica Brown) 
                                 ((humeyra.pamuk@reuters.com; Reuters Messaging:
humeyra.pamuk.reuters.com@reuters.net; +44 20 7542 9736))
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