* US dollar slides ahead of Fed meeting
* Australian dollar dips after quarter point rate hike
* Gold about $7 from record high on weak dlr, IMF gold sale (Repeats to more subscribers)
By Susan Fenton and Kevin Plumberg
HONG KONG, Nov 3 (Reuters) - The dollar slid on Tuesday, pushing gold prices to near record highs, while Asian stocks eased as investors awaited policy announcements from some key central banks this week for clues on the timing of eventual shifts in policy.
The Australian dollar
European stock futures eased, while U.S. equity futures
The dollar fell 0.2 percent against a basket of major currencies <.DXY> as the Fed is not expected to depart from a policy of maintaining low rates for an extended period of time although it could discuss how to prepare markets for an eventual policy shift. [ID:nFEDAHEAD]
The European Central Bank and the Bank of England are expected keep to rates unchanged when they announce policy statements on Thursday.
The Aussie, which traded as high as $0.9092, hit a low of $0.8990 after the RBA was careful not to fuel expectations of another hike in December.
Housing prices are on a tear in Australia, similar to other parts of Asia, keeping monetary authorities increasingly willing to take action to prevent bubbles [ID:nSYU008979], but Tuesday's modest rate rise pointed to gradual not aggressive tightening.
"Clearly the Reserve Bank did not want to frighten the horses by lifting interest rates by half of one percent at this time," said Craig James, chief equities economist at Comsec in Australia. "It is a gradual approach to lifting interest rates."
SWIRE SPIN-OFF
Share prices in Australia dipped while the MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> was down 0.8 percent.
Evidence of a sustained recovery in world industrial activity may force policymakers to spell out the pace at which unusually abundant and cheap money will be withdrawn [ID:nL2419711] and Asian investors appear undecided about the corporate earnings outlook for this quarter, analysts said.
The Thomson Reuters index of regional stocks <.TRXFLDAXPU> was up 0.4 percent.
Japan's market was shut because of a public holiday.
In Manila, shares of Manila Electric Co (Meralco)
In Hong Kong, shares of Swire Pacific <0019.HK> jumped 3 percent by lunchtime after the conglomerate on Monday said it was considering spinning off its property unit.
Share markets in China outperformed the region with the Shanghai composite index <.SSEC> up 1.2 percent as solid earnings and economic data this week continued to encourage investors.
U.S. dollar weakness pushed the price of gold
Gold is up around 20 percent this year, and will likely keep its record of not having a down year since 2000.
The International Monetary Fund said on Monday it sold 200 tonnes of gold to the Reserve Bank of India for $6.8 billion, quietly executing half of a long-planned bullion sale that had threatened to slow gold's rally. [ID:nN02468120]
While the IMF's plan to sell some of its gold holdings had been flagged for a year before it was formally approved in September, the speed of the deal and the buyer were a surprise for traders, who had expected China -- not India -- to be the leading contender as Beijing diversifies its vast reserves.
"The fact that they've sold the gold to India would suggest there's going to be fewer official sales by the IMF on the market. So that might be a positive theme for the gold price," said David Moore, commodities strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia.
This was the first time since 2000 that the IMF sold gold to a central bank.
U.S. oil futures