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    PRECIOUS-Gold rebounds from losses as China data pummels stocks

    * Gold reverses losses but still near two-year low of

    $1,321.35

    * Fed needs to see more from economy before scaling back

    bond-buying -Bernanke

    * China PMI shrinks for first time in 7 months

    (Recasts, updates price)

    By A. Ananthalakshmi

    SINGAPORE, May 23 (Reuters) - Gold climbed off session lows

    on Thursday after weak Chinese factory activity jolted stock

    markets in Asia, sending investors back to the precious metal

    despite expectations the U.S. Federal Reserve will scale back

    its monetary stimulus.

    The Nikkei dropped 7.3 percent, its biggest one-day

    percentage fall in two years, after a preliminary survey showed

    China's factory activity contracting, adding to concerns about a

    delayed recovery. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares

    outside Japan fell 2.1 percent.

    Bullion had earlier fallen after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke

    hinted at reducing an $85 billion bond-buying programme, hurting

    the metal's appeal as a hedge against inflation.

    Spot gold rose 0.5 percent to $1,375.16 an ounce by

    0644 GMT. It hit a low of $1,356.24 earlier in the session, not

    far from a two-year trough of $1,321.35 plumbed in April.

    But gold could come under more selling pressure as Bernanke

    said a decision to adjust the bond-buying program could come in

    the "next few meetings" if the economy looked set to maintain

    momentum.

    "It does not matter if the tapering off (of the bond buying)

    is in this quarter or next or delayed by six months," said

    Dominic Schnider, an analyst at UBS Wealth Management.

    "If you know it's tapering off anyhow in the next 12 months,

    people do not want to be in (gold) anymore."

    The precious metal is down nearly a fifth this year as

    investors have fled to higher-yielding assets such as stocks.

    Holdings in SPDR Gold Trust, the world's largest

    gold-backed exchange-traded fund, fell 0.3 percent to 1,020.07

    tonnes on Wednesday, the lowest in more than four years.

    U.S. gold futures rose 0.49 percent to $1,374.10 an

    ounce. Spot silver was up slightly but platinum

    and palladium were lower.

    DEMAND CONCERNS

    The flash HSBC Purchasing Managers' Index in China for May

    fell to 49.6, slipping under the 50-point level separating

    expansion from contraction, for the first time since October.

    The data revived investor worries about whether China can

    sustain an economic revival this year, after annual growth

    slumped to a 13-year trough in 2012. China's factory output and

    investment performance for April released earlier this month had

    already underwhelmed markets.

    The contraction is an "alarming sign", said UBS' Schnider at

    a time when physical gold demand in Asia has been normalising.

    Top gold buyer India, which had seen gold imports jump 138

    percent in April, is facing a slowdown as the peak wedding

    season comes to an end and its central bank imposes new rules to

    reduce a deficit.

    Precious metals prices 0644 GMT

    Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Volume

    Spot Gold 1375.16 6.62 +0.48 -17.88

    Spot Silver 22.25 0.06 +0.27 -26.52

    Spot Platinum 1456.99 -8.51 -0.58 -5.08

    Spot Palladium 734.47 -9.53 -1.28 6.14

    COMEX GOLD JUN3 1374.10 6.70 +0.49 -18.00 33998

    COMEX SILVER JUL3 22.21 -0.26 -1.17 -26.53 8302

    Euro/Dollar 1.2833

    Dollar/Yen 101.69

    COMEX gold and silver contracts show the most active months

    (Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)