(Adds closing in Tokyo)
                                 By Lewa Pardomuan
                                 SINGAPORE, March 4 (Reuters) - Platinum struck a record for
the second straight day on Tuesday, catching up with gold as a
weaker U.S. dollar and persistent supply problems in South
Africa ignited buying from speculators and investors.
Platinum's gains pushed up sister metal palladium to a
6-1/2-year high. Gold was near an historical high hit the
previous day and on track to touch $1,000 an ounce on
expectations of further U.S. interest rate cuts and record high
crude oil.
                                 Spot platinum <XPT=> hit a high of $2,275 an ounce,
surpassing Monday's top of $2,230 an ounce, and up from
$2,230/2,237 an ounce late in New York.
                                 "Platinum will be trying the $2,500 mark. It won't be
surprising to see investors continue to buy platinum," said
William Kwan, a dealer at Phillip Futures in Singapore.
                                 Platinum, used in jewellery and auto catalysts to clean
exhaust fumes, has risen more than 40 percent in 2008 as
problems with power supply which disrupted mining in main
producer South Africa triggered supply fears and sparked
speculative buying.
  The most active Tokyo platinum futures <0#JPL:>, currently
February 2009, ended up by the daily 300 yen limit at 7,274 yen
per gram.
                                 Gold <XAU=> hit a bid high of $987 an ounce, up from
$981.20/982.00 late in New York, within sight of Monday's
all-time high of $989.30 an ounce.
                                 "Gold is being pushed up by the general bullish sentiment
across commodities. All hedge funds are buying the market up.
They are increasing their long positions," he said.
                                 "There's a possibility before the FOMC, the market may
price in an aggressive rate cut, and push up the price to above
$1,000," said Kwan.
                                 The U.S. Federal Reserve's Federal Open Market Committee
holds a one-day meeting on interest rates on March 18.
Short-term interest rate futures showed about a 75 percent
perceived chance of the Fed lowering its benchmark overnight
lending rate by 75 basis points at its next meeting.
                                 In theory, lower interest rates elevate gold's appeal as an
alternative investment.
                                 The dollar's trade-weighted index against six major
currencies was 73.701 <.DXY>. It hit 73.354 on Monday, its
lowest level since the index was created in 1973.
                                 "Prices beyond $1,000 seem inevitable, but beyond this
psychological figure, price sustainability would be a key
issue," said Pradeep Unni, an analyst at Vision Commodities in
Dubai.
                                 "Retail demand has hit rock bottom and this is a bad signal
for the long-term bull market. For the moment, immediate
resistance is likely around $992 and $1,004," he said.
                                 The physical sector slowed to a trickle in Singapore on
Tuesday after jewellers in Indonesia and Thailand cashed in
their holdings the previous day to take advantage of
record-high prices.
                                 "I think there will be initial selling by jewellers when
the price hits $1,000. But I am not sure if they will sell in
huge quantity because after all, they haven't bought a lot
lately," said a dealer in Singapore.
                                 Premiums for gold bars were on par to the spot London price
in Singapore, unchanged from last week <GOLD/ASIA1>.
                                 Gold futures for April delivery <GCJ8> on the COMEX
division of the New York Mercantile Exchange added $1.0 an
ounce to $985.2 an ounce - off its record high of $992.00 hit
Monday.
                                 Spot palladium <XPD=> rose as high as $588 an ounce, its
highest in more than six years, up from $576/580 late in New
York.
                                 Silver <XAG=> edged up to $20.28/20.33 an ounce from
$20.27/20.32 an ounce, within sight of a 27-year peak of $20.60
an ounce on Monday.
 Precious metals prices at 0842 GMT
 Metal             Last    Change  Pct chg  YTD pct chg
Turnover
 Spot Gold         983.05   -0.35   -0.04     18.06
 Spot Silver        20.30    0.00   +0.00     37.44
 Spot Platinum    2266.00   36.00   +1.61     49.08
 Spot Palladium    587.00   11.00   +1.91     59.51
 TOCOM Gold       3288.00   20.00   +0.61      7.45       
92198
 TOCOM Platinum   7274.00  300.00   +4.30     36.24       
40064
 TOCOM Silver      679.00   10.70   +1.60     25.51        
2958
 TOCOM Palladium  2051.00   65.00   +3.27     51.81       
28024
 Euro/Dollar       1.5190
 Dollar/Yen        103.28
 TOCOM prices in yen per gram, except TOCOM silver which is
priced in yen per 10 grams. Spot prices in $ per ounce.
 (Editing by Ben Tan)
 (lewa.pardomuan@reuters.com; +65 6870 3834;  Reuters
Messaging:lewa.pardomuan.reuters.com@reuters.net))