--Comex December gold rises $8.70, or 0.5%, to settle at $1,746.30 a troy ounce

--Spain bailout chatter drags on U.S. dollar, supports gold

--Gold settled at a one-month low Monday after more upbeat data limited stimulus hopes

--Platinum, palladium also gain as South Africa strike talks break down

 
   By Matt Day 
 

NEW YORK--Gold futures rebounded in thin trading on Tuesday, as a weaker U.S. dollar and hopes that Spain was moving toward a bailout request drew buyers back to the precious metal.

The most actively traded contract, for December delivery, rose $8.70, or 0.5%, to settle at $1,746.30 a troy ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The dollar was lower against some other major currencies Tuesday after a Spanish official outlined some potential terms for a bailout request. Concerns about whether Spain would ask for an international backstop for its rattled financial system had kept pressure on currencies seen as risky in recent weeks, sending investors into the U.S. dollar.

A rising dollar can hit dollar-denominated gold by making the futures appear more expensive for buyers using other currencies.

After the bailout request chatter, and some upbeat German economic data, The Wall Street Journal Dollar Index was recently at 69.551, down from 69.783 late Monday in New York.

Gold had settled at a one-month low Monday, dragged lower as traders cut their bullish bets to lock in profits after the metal's rally following the unveiling of the Federal Reserve's latest bond-buying program last month. Accommodative monetary policies such as the Fed's can draw investors looking for an inflation hedge to gold and other precious metals. Similar easing moves by central banks in Europe and Asia have also lifted sentiment in the gold market recently.

"The ultraexpansionary monetary policy pursued by central banks suggests that the gold price will rise again in the near future, as do the ongoing strikes in the South African gold mines," analysts with Commerzbank said in a note.

Gold Fields Ltd. (GFI) said on Tuesday that it will fire thousands of workers in South Africa unless a strike is called off by Thursday afternoon, as labor unrest in the country's mining industry continues. Mines operated by AngloGold Ashanti Ltd (ANG.JO) and Harmony Gold Mining Co. Ltd. (HMY) are also shut down because of strikes.

Talks between AngloGold, Gold Fields, Harmony and striking mineworkers and their representatives broke down on Monday.

Strikes in South Africa's massive precious metals industry began in August at a platinum mine owned by Lonmin PLC (LMI.LN), raising worries that the supply of platinum and palladium may be limited.

Platinum, which had retreated from its recent peak on hopes that strikes in South Africa were heading toward a resolution, rose 0.8% on Tuesday to settle at $1,645.20 a troy ounce on the Nymex. December-delivery palladium rose 1% to settle at $638.95 a troy ounce.

South Africa is the world's largest platinum producer, the No. 2 miner of palladium, and the No. 5 gold producer, according to data from metals consultancy Thomson Reuters GFMS.

 
Settlements (ranges include open-outcry and electronic trading): 
London PM Gold Fix: $1,746.50; previous PM $1,736.00 
Dec gold $1,746.30, up $8.70; Range $1,736.10-$1,748.90 
Dec silver $32.959, up 21.60 cents; Range $32.655-$33.080 
Jan platinum $1,645.20, up $12.90; Range $1,635.00-$1,652.70 
Dec palladium $638.95, up $6.35; Range $631.95-$642.40 
 
 

--Devon Maylie contributed to this article

Write to Matt Day at matt.day@dowjones.com

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