* Italy election sparks fear about political chaos, rocks
financial markets
* Spot gold may rebound to $1,604/oz -technicals
* Coming up: Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke starts two-day
testimony to Congress
(Adds details, comments; updates prices)
By Rujun Shen
SINGAPORE, Feb 26 (Reuters) - Spot gold inched up on
Tuesday, extending gains into a fourth consecutive session as
uncertainty over Italy's election results stoked fears of a
resurgent euro zone debt crisis and boosted bullion's appeal as
a safe-haven investment.
The Italian elections shook global markets, with no party or
coalition winning a majority in the Senate, fuelling worries of
a split parliament and power vacuum in the euro zone's
third-largest economy.
The surge in demand for safety assets helped gold rise
nearly 1 percent towards $1,600 an ounce and the dollar index
to a six-month high in the previous session, while U.S.
stocks suffered their biggest daily drop since November.
"Concerns about Italy's political chaos drove investors to
scoop up gold but the rebound is limited as investors remained
reluctant," said Li Ning, an analyst at Shanghai CIFCO Futures.
A generally improving outlook on the global economy, and
concerns about the duration of the U.S. Federal Reserve's
monetary stimulus programme, has sapped the interest of gold
buyers and sent spot gold down more than 5 percent this year.
SPDR Gold Trust, the world's largest gold-backed
exchange-traded fund, reported its holdings dropped for the
fifth consecutive session on Monday to 1,272.848 tonnes,
matching a similar sell-off run in May 2011.
Meanwhile, speculators slashed their net long positions in
U.S. gold to the lowest level in more than four years, data from
the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed.
Spot gold edged up 0.2 percent to $1,596.40 an ounce
by 0315 GMT, extending gains into a fourth straight session.
U.S. gold rose 0.6 percent to $1,596.10.
Technical analysis suggested spot gold could rebound to
$1,604 an ounce, as indicated by its wave pattern and a
Fibonacci retracement analysis, said Reuters market analyst Wang
Tao.
Investors will closely watch U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke's testimony to Congress on Tuesday and Wednesday,
to seek further clues on the Fed's attitude on its monetary
policy.
A poll showed that likely government budget cuts and the
prospect for messy political fights over fiscal policy will
weigh on the U.S. economy this year, as the world's top economy
is headed to automatic cuts in most government programmes on
March 1, in the absence of a budget deal among lawmakers.
A weaker economy would argue for the need for the Fed to
maintain its bond-buying scheme, extending support for gold as
an inflation hedge. But worries about the world's top economy
slipping into another recession could in the short term hammer
gold alongside riskier assets.
Precious metals prices 0315 GMT
Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Volume
Spot Gold 1596.40 2.54 +0.16 -4.67
Spot Silver 29.06 0.05 +0.17 -4.03
Spot Platinum 1601.50 -3.00 -0.19 4.33
Spot Palladium 734.72 1.50 +0.20 6.17
COMEX GOLD APR3 1596.10 9.50 +0.60 -4.76 11976
COMEX SILVER MAR3 29.03 0.04 +0.13 -3.99 2292
Euro/Dollar 1.3081
Dollar/Yen 92.41
COMEX gold and silver contracts show the most active months
(Editing by Tom Hogue)
Two official reports on the underlying position of the federal budget have been released, both painting a dire …

