* Gold eases after hitting record, silver at 30-year peak
* Comments from World Bank's Zoellick in focus
(Updates prices)
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON, Nov 8 (Reuters) - Gold dipped on Monday following its largest two-day gain in a year at the end of last week, but remained near record highs after the dollar rallied against the euro and dented precious metals prices.
The gold price has risen by about 5 percent in the last five trading days, driven by the drop in the U.S. currency after the Federal Reserve last week detailed its plans to buy over half a trillion dollars' worth of Treasuries to revive the economy.
Evidence of a cooling in investor interest in gold put the price under some pressure this session, with holdings of gold in the SPRD Gold Trust <GLD> down for an eighth session in a row and a decline in speculative interest in New York futures.
Spot gold <XAU=> was last quoted at $1,393.99 an ounce at 1620 GMT, down from $1,394.50 in New York on Friday, when it staged its biggest two-day gain since November last year, and down from an all-time high of $1,398.35 earlier in the day.
U.S. December gold futures <GCZ0> were down $6.5 an ounce at $1,391.30.
Comments from World Bank president Robert Zoellick in the Financial Times calling for leading economies to consider readopting a modified global gold standard to guide currency movements did not have much impact on the price. [
]"Gold could potentially play a small role in the overall framework, but I don't think we are in a position to go back to a gold standard," said commodities strategist Nic Brown of Natixis.
"The world economy has moved too far from there and it would need to be one that was built around a more inclusive range of currencies," he said.
UNREALISTIC
Zoellick called for a system that "is likely to need to involve the dollar, the euro, the yen, the pound and (yuan) that moves towards internationalisation and then an open capital account."
"I can imagine what he meant was asset inflation as measured by the gold price should be an indicator that should be considered by the central banks when they make their interest-rate decisions," said LBBW analyst Thorsten Proettel.
The consensus among precious metals analysts was that the gold market is also simply too small to absorb such demand.
"Unlike the World Bank, we do not believe that a form of the gold standard will return. Very simply, there is not enough gold supply in the world for the metal to perform in this role," said Edel Tully, precious metals strategist at UBS.
"As Paul Donavon, from UBS Global Economics points out, any reserve currency needs a supply that can grow as rapidly as global trade. Gold supply falls significantly short of this basic requirement." <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
For the Q&A "Could world markets warm to a gold standard?" please see: [
]For a Reuters Insider clip on the market's take on Zoellick's comments, see: http://link.reuters.com/pyv93q ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
Outside of the policy arena, Ong Yi Ling, an investment analyst with Phillip Futures in Singapore, said another key trigger would be growth in ETF holdings to match price gains.
"What I would like to see would be the holdings in the ETF side. I would like to see it increase to really show that this rally in gold prices is sustainable," said Ong.
The SPDR Gold Trust <GLD.P> said its holdings slipped to 1,291.766 tonnes by Nov. 5 from 1,292.189 on Nov. 2. The holdings hit a record at 1,320.436 tonnes on June 29. [
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For a factbox on how to invest in gold and price drivers, click [
]For gold's milestones on the road to record high, click [
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Higher gold prices attracted selling in Southeast Asia, but premiums for gold bars were steady in Singapore as bargain hunters resurfaced at lower levels. <GOLD/ASIA1>
The euro fell for a second day against the dollar, as investors fretted about Ireland's debt problems and some of the euro zone's other weaker links. The dollar index <.DXY> was last up 0.7 percent. [
]Silver <XAG=> hit a fresh 30-year peak at $26.98 an ounce and was last at $26.81 an ounce, up 0.4 percent and near its highest since March 1980, while platinum <XPT=> was down 0.7 percent at $1,754.74 an ounce, marking a second successive day of declines and palladium <XPD=> was up 2.1 percent at $696.97, up for a fourth day in a row. (Additional reporting by Lewa Pardomuan in Singapore and Siddesh Mayanker in Mumbai; Editing by Alison Birrane)