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    PRECIOUS-Gold dips, but 2.15 pct weekly rise biggest in a month

    * Gold boosted this week by drop in stock markets, falling

    dollar

    * Fed official dampens talk Fed policy may soon tighten

    * Largest physical gold fund sees fresh outflow

    (Recasts, updates prices, adds comment, adds to byline,

    dateline (prev LONDON)

    By Carole Vaporean

    NEW YORK, May 24 (Reuters) - Gold turned modestly lower on

    Friday as some players exited positions ahead of a long U.S.

    weekend, but registered its biggest weekly percentage gain in a

    month, supported by a drop in stock markets and a softer dollar.

    Comments from a Federal Reserve official that dampened talk

    the U.S. central bank is set to curb monetary stimulus also

    underpinned gold prices, which stuck to a fairly tight range.

    Spot gold was down 0.23 percent at $1,387.51 an ounce

    by 2:37 EDT (1837 GMT), slightly lower than $1,390.40 late on

    Thursday. It remained up 2.15 percent on the week, its biggest

    weekly rise since late April.

    COMEX June gold futures closed at $1,386.6 per ounce,

    down $5.2, or 0.37 percent and held around those levels in

    after-hours business.

    Gold got a boost this week from declining equity markets,

    which in Europe on Thursday posted their biggest one-day drop in

    nearly a year. On Friday, U.S. stocks fell for a third day,

    putting indexes on track for their first negative week since

    mid-April.

    "A weaker dollar combined with continued QE, some physical

    buying at the lower levels out to China in particular, all of

    those factors have helped gold in the last few days," said

    Robin Bhar, metals analyst at Societe Generale Group in London.

    QE refers to quantitative easing, or the Federal Reserve's

    program of buying about $85 billion a month in debt to keep U.S.

    interest rates low and stimulate the economy.

    The dollar extended its decline against the yen and was on

    track for its biggest weekly loss in three years against the

    Japanese currency. The euro rose 0.7 percent this week against

    the dollar, its first weekly gain in three periods.

    During the U.S. session, gold ventured into negative regions

    with some players reluctant to hang onto a long gold position

    over the extended Memorial Day weekend in the United States,

    given the latest uncertainty about Federal Reserve policy.

    Speculation the Fed would scale back its monetary easing

    program weighed on gold this week after Fed Chairman Ben

    Bernanke said the central bank could start scaling back its $85

    billion in monthly bond purchases in the next few meetings.

    But, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said on Friday

    that U.S. inflation would have to pick up before he voted to

    scale back stimulus.

    "There's a lot of uncertainty. There's still no better than

    50/50 chance that the Fed will unwind its stimulus or that the

    economy performs as they expect it will," said Bhar.

    A healthier-than-forecast reading on April orders for U.S.

    durable goods, which range from toasters to aircraft, also

    knocked gold lower as the need for a safety play eased investor

    concerns about the U.S. economy.

    "This week presented something for everyone," Saxo Bank vice

    president Ole Hansen said. "The bears have not seen any evidence

    of them being wrong, while the bulls got a bit of safe haven and

    on balance a rather dovish Bernanke."

    "Bottom line, we are still in dangerous territory having

    failed so far to move back above $1,414. The double bottom which

    is now in the making might give technical traders some comfort,

    but for it to be confirmed we ideally need to see a $1,432

    print, so it's not yet something to lean against."

    GOLD FUND REPORTS FRESH OUTFLOW

    The SPDR Gold Trust, the world's largest gold-backed

    ETF, reported at the close of Thursday that its holdings had

    fallen by another 1.5 tonnes, bringing its total outflow for the

    week to 19.8 tonnes.

    The fund is on track for its largest weekly outflow since

    the week ended April 26. At 1,018.567 tonnes, its holdings were

    at their lowest in more than four years.

    Macquarie said in a note on Friday that ETF liquidation this

    year had totalled 450 tonnes of gold.

    "If ETFs continue to leach gold - and despite the outflows,

    over 2,200 tonnes remain - then gold's price outlook will depend

    on these retail buyers."

    Among other precious metals, silver was down 0.71

    percent at $22.40 an ounce. Silver held near its cheapest versus

    gold in 2-1/2 years on Friday.

    Spot platinum was down 0.76 percent at $1,447.49 an

    ounce. Spot palladium fell 1.59 percent to $727.72.

    Prices at 3:09 p.m. EDT (1909 GMT)

    LAST/ NET PCT YTD

    CLOSE CHG CHG CHG

    US gold 1386.60 -5.20 -0.4% -11.5%

    US silver 22.496 -0.012 0.0% -19.4%

    US platinum 1451.90 -5.30 -0.4% 3.7%

    US palladium 726.45 -12.20 -1.7% 10.7%

    Gold 1384.20 -6.50 -0.5% -11.5%

    Silver 22.36 -0.20 -0.9% -19.2%

    Platinum 1448.24 -10.37 -0.7% 4.0%

    Palladium 722.72 -11.71 -1.6% 10.8%

    Gold Fix 1390.25 5.00 0.4% -11.7%

    Silver Fix 22.38 -9.00 -0.4% -20.6%

    Platinum Fix 1455.00 5.00 0.3% 5.4%

    Palladium Fix 729.00 8.00 1.1% 14.6%

    (Additional reporting by Jan Harvey in London; Editing by Jane

    Baird, Alison Birrane and David Gregorio)