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Concerns about China and Ukraine help euro to 2


Credit: Reuters/Yuya Shino


1 of 7. Pedestrians walk past an electronic board showing various stock prices, which are reflected in a polished stone surface, outside a brokerage in Tokyo January 24, 2014.


The euro reached $1.3967 and looked set to test psychological resistance at a $1.40, in a possible sign that the currency is regaining safe-haven status following the currency bloc's prolonged sovereign debt crisis.


The euro zone's economic recovery seems to be picking up steam even as the European Central Bank resists pressure to ease policy further to counter deflation risks.


'The policy messages and data support the euro and we think that will allow it to continue to push higher from here,' said Ian Stannard, a strategist at Morgan Stanley in London.


More traditional safe-havens also strengthened, with the Swiss franc extending gains against the dollar to 0.87095 francs - its strongest since late 2011. The Japanese yen also firmed.


Stock markets in Europe edged higher but remained pinned near one-month lows, with a 0.1 percent rise in the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 barely recouping any of the 1.1 percent drop in the previous session.


The move echoed trading in Asia, where MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS managed to rise 0.5 percent, clawing back half the previous day's losses, despite concerns over Chinese growth that limited gains.


Soft Chinese data dented many markets. Japan's Nikkei .N225 slipped 0.1 percent, erasing gains made after Japanese machinery orders beat expectations, while South Korean shares .KS11 also lost most of their earlier gains.


China's industrial output growth came in below forecasts for the combined January/February period, with retail sales also weaker than expected, stoking worries that growth could slow as Beijing pushes for economic reforms.


'The China economy is slowing quite sharply, in our view... (although) the lack of inflation and slowing growth does open the door for policy easing,' Gerard Lane, equity strategist at Shore Capital, said in a note.


The MSCI All-Country World index .MIWD00000PUS edged up 0.2 percent, not far from an eight-day low hit on Wednesday, while U.S. futures also pointed to a slightly higher open.


A major victim of concerns over China, copper dropped 0.3 percent to $6,485.50 a metric ton (7148.5 ton), a day after it hit a four-year low at $6376.25.


After a tumble in copper of around 7.5 percent so far this month, investors are worried about a possible unraveling of Chinese loan deals using the metal - whose many industrial uses make it sensitive to global economic health - as collateral.


Also providing a boost to safe haven assets was the ongoing situation in Ukraine, as the diplomatic stalemate between Russia and the West over Crimea continued.


Gold hit a six-month high of $1,374.85, while U.S. Treasuries have erased all the losses made following last week's strong payrolls data. The benchmark 10-year yield was 2.74 percent on Thursday versus its six-week high of 2.82 percent hit last Friday.


The European Union agreed on a framework on Wednesday for its first sanctions on Russia since the Cold War.


'Markets are nervous over China and Ukraine, with the latter weighing the most because of the uncertainty of what will happen next and the seeming lack of any coordinated or effective response,' Titan Investment Partners trader Darren Sinden said.


Geopolitical tension also supported oil. The European benchmark Brent held relatively firm at $107.88 as it drew support from the unfolding crisis in Ukraine.


U.S. crude futures steadied, although they remained near one-month lows hit on Wednesday after Washington announced a surprise plan for a test release of strategic oil reserves.


In debt markets, Irish government bond yields hit new record lows before Dublin's first regular debt auction since its 2010 bailout, seen as a post-crisis watershed for the country.


Investors expected a solid auction result, which some said could be a catalyst for another leg in the Irish debt rally which has taken 10-year yields to just below 3 percent from a peak of over 15 percent in 2011.


'This return to domestic bond auctions is the final stage of Ireland regaining full access to capital markets,' said Sandra Holdsworth, an investment manager at Kames Capital.


'We expect Thursday's auction to pass successfully... However, one note of caution: at current levels of yield there is little margin to protect investors should the economic outlook worsen or fiscal discipline be lost.'


(Additional reporting by Marius Zaharia and Patrick Graham in London and Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo; Editing by Catherine Evans)


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