Echoing the weakness in gold, spot platinum fell more than 3 percent to its lowest since November 2009 and silver fell more than 3 percent to a 3-month low."
The euro hit its lowest level versus the dollar in nearly a year on Thursday, after high 10-year bond yields at an Italian auction prompted investors to sell the single currency, with moves exacerbated by thin year-end trade.
Investors still demanded a near 7 percent yield to buy 10-year paper, a level seen unsustainable over time for the euro zone third-largest economy. A stronger U.S. unit makes dollar-priced commodities such as precious metals costlier for holders of other currencies.
"Peripheral yields are still on the rise; the 6-month Italian debt auction wasn't that bad but the long-term auction is still lacking trust," said VTB Capital analyst Andrey Kryuchenkov.
"Sentiment is still down since it's the year-end and really you have larger problems at hand: the markets are still disappointed with the ECB reluctance to become the lender of last resort and changing fiscal discipline will take time."
Spot gold fell 1.77 percent to $1,527.79 an ounce by 1214 GMT, from $1,555.19 late in New York on Wednesday.
Earlier it hit a near six-month low of $1,521.94.
U.S. gold February futures lost more 2 percent to $1,529.70.
LIQUIDITY SQUEEZE
A spiraling euro debt crisis and increased need for liquidity in the last few months have pushed banks and other financial participants to sell assets including gold, generally deemed to be a safe haven during economic woes.
Gold was on course for a 12 percent fall this month, its biggest drop since October 2008 when the credit crunch hit most financial markets.
"The stress in the banking sector has increases as indicators such as the euro/dollar basis swaps show... There is a shortage of liquidity and, if you have to refinance, you have to sell your assets, including gold," said Credit Suisse analyst Tobias Merath.
"Gold is not a safe haven assets against a liquidity crisis. Banks need to sell assets to raise cash and avoid bankruptcy."
A rebound for gold is possible if policymakers take measures such as liquidity injection or interest rates cuts, which could help alleviate the credit crunch and would lessen the necessity to sell assets such as commodities, analysts said.
Silver was down 2.63 percent at $26.33 an ounce while palladium was down 1.07 percent at $627.72 an ounce. Platinum was last down 2.85 percent at $1,345.20 an ounce.
It earlier hit its lowest in more than 2 years at $1,338.20.
Platinum was hit harder than other precious metals due to growth fears in the Eurozone for 2012, Kryuchenkov said.
As in Europe buyers prefer diesel engines with a higher platinum content poor growth in this area dampens platinum demand prospects.
(Editing by William Hardy)
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