imageLONDON: Gold climbed in volatile trade on Friday, bouncing from session lows reached after US jobs data beat forecasts, as traders who had bet on even larger losses rushed to cover their positions.

The market fell immediately after the figures showed that US employers had hired more workers than expected in November and the unemployment rate had dropped to a five-year low of 7 percent, which strengthened the case for the Federal Reserve to start reducing bond purchases as soon as this month.

But the slide stopped short of revisiting a five-month low reached earlier this week of $1,211.36, which led holders of short positions, or bets that prices would fall steeply, scrambling to cover. Spot gold was up 0.7 percent at $1,233.41 an ounce at 1439 GMT, off an earlier low of $1,211.80. US gold futures for February delivery were up at $1,232.60.

"We are seeing some emerging profit-taking on short positions similar to what we saw earlier in the week. It could indicate support is building in the $1,200 area and could eventually lead to a greater amount of short-covering," Saxo Bank analyst Ole Hansen said.

Gold prices have now erased some of their losses for the week but were still down 1.2 percent after having dropped sharply on Thursday as data showed the US economy grew faster than estimated in the third quarter. That also helped support the case for the Fed to start scaling back its bond-buying programme.

Ultra-loose US monetary policy has been a key driver of higher gold prices in recent years as it maintains pressure on interest rates while stoking fears of inflation.

"Whether the Fed votes to begin tapering in December or January, the recent data has been fairly encouraging," Credit Suisse analyst Tom Kendall said. "The economy continues to move in the right direction."

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