* Gold falls after early rally to record near $1,250/oz
* Falling equities, commods trigger liquidation in gold
* Euro, stocks, industrial commods slip on debt concerns
* JM says may see platinum at $2,000/oz in next 6 mths
* Coming up: US April housing starts on Tuesday (Recasts, updates prices, market activity to market close; new byline, changes dateline, previously LONDON)
By Frank Tang
NEW YORK, May 14 (Reuters) - Gold ended flat on Friday after an early rally to record highs fizzled, but the metal posted its fourth straight weekly increase as jittery investors fretted that a $1 trillion European rescue could be too late to contain debt contagion.
Bullion prices jumped early in choppy trade, then dropped. The slump deepened as investors sold gold to cover losses in sliding equities, commodities and crude oil markets, traders said.
"There is some margin-related selling in gold triggered by losses in other assets. And the technical indicators are very high, it's not surprising that we would have consolidation today," said Bill O'Neill, partner of New Jersey-based commodities firm LOGIC Advisors.
O'Neill cited a rise in the relative strength index for gold's weakness. Gold's RSI rose to above 70 this week -- considered an overbought signal by technical analysts. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
For a graphic showing gold's relative strength index, click:
http://link.reuters.com/zyq34k ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
Spot gold <XAU=> fell as much as 2.4 percent from its earlier record high of $1,248.95 an ounce, and was at $1,230.95 an ounce at 2:44 p.m. EDT (1844 GMT), down slightly from $1,231.83 late in New York on Wednesday.
U.S. gold futures for June delivery <GCM0> on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange settled down $1.40 at $1,227.80.
Gold investors cashed in gains as U.S. stock markets fell more than 2 percent, oil tumbled 4 percent and base metals fell sharply. [
] [ ] [ ]"There are losses being made in various places, and potentially there is a need to lock in some profits to offset some of the losses being created in commodities generally... and in other sectors," said Saxo Bank senior manager Ole Hansen.
"When you start to see other sectors start to give way as we've seen here, that will have a natural spillover effect."
Gold's last foray above $1,200 an ounce in December was quickly followed by a hefty correction. Prices dropped as much as 5 percent the day after hitting a then-record $1,226.10.
Gold prices surged earlier this week amid fears a $1 trillion rescue for debt-laden euro zone economies would fail to stabilize markets and could prove inflationary.
GOLD HOLDINGS AT RECORD HIGH
Investment interest in physical gold was strong, with holdings of the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, New York's SPDR Gold Trust <GLD>, at a record high 1,209.5 tonnes on Thursday.
The fund's reserves have risen 68.5 tonnes or 6 percent in the last four weeks. The SPDR ETF is the world's sixth largest holder of gold, ahead of Switzerland, China and Japan.
Safe-haven buying is seen continuing to buoy gold prices, their current correction notwithstanding.
Silver <XAG=> tracked gold lower to $19.21 an ounce against $19.41. Platinum <XPT=> was at $1,713 an ounce against $1,731.50 and palladium <XPD=> at $523.50 against $537.
Rising investment may take platinum to $2,000 an ounce in the next six months, its highest since mid-2008, Johnson Matthey said in a statement released ahead of London Platinum Week. Palladium may rise as high as $700 an ounce, it added, its highest since 2001. [
]Close Change Pct 2009 YTD
Chg Close % Chg US gold <GCM0> 1227.80 -1.4 -0.1 1096.20 12.0 US silver <SIN0> 19.225 -0.274 -1.4 16.845 14.1 US platinum <PLN0> 1715.40 -24.00 -1.4 1471.00 16.6 US palladium <PAM0> 527.90 -15.40 -2.8 408.85 29.1 Prices at 2:49 p.m. EDT (1849 GMT) Gold <XAU=> 1231.95 0.12 0.0 1096.35 12.4 Silver <XAG=> 19.21 -0.20 -1.0 16.84 14.1 Platinum <XPT=> 1713.00 -18.50 -1.1 1465.50 16.9 Palladium <XPD=> 523.50 -13.500 -2.5 405.50 29.1 Gold Fix <XAUFIX=> 1236.50 -2.25 -0.2 1104 12.0 Silver Fix <XAGFIX=> 19.64 21.00 1.1 16.99 15.6 Platinum Fix <XPTFIX=> 1721.00 5.00 0.3 1466 17.4 Palladium Fix<XPDFIX=> 536.00 5.00 0.9 402 33.3 (Additional reporting by Jan Harvey in London; Editing by David Gregorio)