* Gold steadies around $1,200, PGMs under pressure
* ETF flows up as world equities sag
* Coming Up: U.S. Initial jobless claims Weekly; 1230 GMT
(Updates throughout with comment, prices, changes dateline from SINGAPORE)
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON, Aug 12 (Reuters) - Gold prices rallied on Thursday, paring some of the previous day's losses, as flagging confidence in the global economic outlook battered stock markets and prompted a flurry of investment in perceived safe-haven assets.
Global equities <.MIW0000PUS> fell and the dollar index <.DXY> was roughly unchanged, having racked up its largest daily gain in two years on Wednesday after a raft of economic data suggested global growth was beginning to plateau.
Platinum and palladium fell by more than 2 percent as concern deepened over waning industrial demand, particularly from the auto sector.
Gold <XAU=> was bid at $1,200.35 an ounce by 0905 GMT, against $1,197.00 late in New York on Wednesday, just above its 100-day moving average at $1,191.30, but still over 5 percent below late June's lifetime high around $1,264.
Gold for December delivery on COMEX <GCZ0> was up $3.0 at $1,202.20 an ounce.
An aggressive sell-off in the wider commodity markets could spell another bout of weakness for gold as investors cash in on their bullion holdings to cover losses elsewhere.
"It all points to a picture of a recovery that is grinding to a slow halt here and that will have an impact," said Ole Hansen, senior manager at Saxo Bank.
"If we see losses in some of these other commodity markets it is going to be tricky for gold to make headway but at the same time it seems to be well supported here," he said.
Traders in London also pointed to a research note from Goldman Sachs, which upgraded its forecast for the gold price, as a driver to the rally in the price on Thursday.
"The recent sell-off has left speculative long positions in gold oversold relative to US real interest rates, which we believe has set the stage for a rally to our 6-month gold price target of $1,300/oz," the bank said.
INVESTORS SEEK GOLD
Although demand from key Asian consumers has been suppressed by the rise in gold prices over the last week or so, the desire for a safe haven as financial market volatility increases has translated into a rise in investment demand. [
]The world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust <GLD.P>, said its holdings rose for the first time in a week. [
]Silver <XAG=> caught a safe-haven bid, edging up to $17.86 an ounce from $17.84 the day before.
"I would expect the equity markets to continue to sell off. We may see more gold selling as we've often seen before to cover those margin calls," said Darren Heathcote, head of trading at Investec Australia in Sydney.
"It's being pulled both ways, in terms of selling for margin calls, but on the other hand safe-haven investors will be attracted to gold."
Fear of a global slowdown has hit Japan's Nikkei <
> particularly hard, as the index fell to a 13-month low on Thursday, which in turn undermined industrial commodities such as platinum and crude oil <CLc1>.The euro <EUR=> rose against the dollar as signs emerged of stabilisation in peripheral euro zone bond yields. [
]Asian traders said the drop in PGM prices was a knee-jerk reaction to declines in Asian stocks. [
]Spot platinum <XPT=> was last at $1,507.00 an ounce, down around 2.5 percent from levels seen late in New York on Wednesday, while palladium <XPD=> was off by more than 3 percent, at $461.00 versus $477.00.
"I think we are just reacting to the drop in stock markets, but there has been some physical buying from jewellers because of cheaper prices," said one Hong Kong platinum dealer. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
For a graphic of the correlation of spot platinum to the Nikkei, click on this link:
http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/AC_20101208100008.jpg ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Additional reporting by Lewa Pardomuan in Singapore; editing by Sue Thomas)