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Stocks slip, Japan rebounds in holiday-thinned trade

The dollar rose about 0.5 percent to 117.42 yen, moving away from Friday's 2-1/2 week low of 116.285. It slid 3.6 percent last week, its biggest weekly drop since July 2009.

Pedestrians walk past an electronic stock quotation board outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan January 22, 2016. REUTERS/Toru Hanai

Asian shares pared losses on Monday as a weaker yen helped Japan'sNikkei snap a four-day losing streak, but trade was thin with many regional markets closed for the Lunar New Year holiday.

Wall Street's losses on Friday curbed overall sentiment, though S&P 500 E-Mini futures rose about 0.4 percent as investors focused on signs of strength in a mixed U.S. nonfarm payrolls report released late last week.

Financial spreadbetters predicted Britain's FTSE 100 to open around 0.6 percent higher, and Germany's DAX and France's CAC 40 to each open up about 0.4 percent.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.1 percent, with Australian shares slipping a few points to end nearly flat.

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But Japan's Nikkei erased early steep losses as the dollar gained on the yen, and ended up 1.1 percent.

With Singapore, Hong Kong and mainland China all closed for the new year holiday, volume was thin. China, a focus of recent market concern, will be closed for the entire week for the holiday.

Data released over the weekend showed China's foreign reserves fell for a third straight month in January, as the central bank dumped dollars to defend the yuan and prevent an increase in capital outflows.

Beijing has been struggling to underpin the yuan, which faces depreciation pressure as China's growth rate slows to its lowest levels in a quarter of a century.

"Just as China's persistent accumulation of foreign reserves in the first decade of the 21st century signalled that its managed currency was undervalued, its persistent loss of foreign reserves signals that the yuan has become overvalued by market criteria," economist Bill Adams at PNC Financial Services Group said in a research note.

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"There is a large probability that China's central bank tires of spending its foreign reserves to defend an overvalued currency in the near future. The People's Bank of China will likely widen the currency's trading band and permit a larger managed slide against the dollar in coming months."

Also over the weekend, North Korea's launch of a long-range rocket drew international condemnation.

SOME STRENGTH IN US JOBS

On Wall Street, major U.S. indexes logged both daily and weekly drops. The Nasdaq Composite led session losses, plunging 3.25 percent after a spate of disappointing forecasts from the technology sector.

Recently weak U.S. economic data has led investors to pare bets on a steady pace of interest rate increases by the Federal Reserve.

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The U.S. nonfarm payrolls report on Friday showed an increase of just 151,000 jobs last month, falling well short of expectations for a rise of 190,000.

But the unemployment rate fell to 4.9 percent, the lowest since February 2008, and wages rose, indicating some signs of underlying strength in the labour market despite the weak headline figure.

Speculators slashed bullish bets on the U.S. dollar for a sixth straight week through Feb. 2, as net longs fell to their lowest level since roughly the third week of October, according to Reuters calculations and data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission released on Friday.

In currency markets, the dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major rivals, edged up 0.1 percent to 97.127, well above a nadir of 96.259 plumbed last Thursday, its lowest since October.

"What we are seeing today is a correction after overwhelming selling in the dollar we saw last week. It is just unwinding of positions, not fresh bets against the yen," said Koichi Takamatsu, executive director of forex trading at Nomura Securities.

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The euro edged down about 0.2 percent to $1.1137, though it remained in sight of Friday's three-month high of $1.1250 scaled immediately after the headline figure of the payrolls data led investors to reduce their bets on further Fed rate hikes.

The Australian dollar added 0.5 percent to $0.7094 after plunging nearly 2 percent against its U.S. counterpart on Friday.

Crude oil futures edged higher on hopes that big oil producers will take steps to address the global supply glut that has led to recent steep selloffs.

Saudi Arabia's oil minister Ali al-Naimi discussed cooperation between OPEC members and other oil producers to stabilise the global oil market with his Venezuelan counterpart on Sunday, according to state news agency SPA.

But nothing was decided, so caution kept gains in check. Brent crude added about 0.9 percent to $34.38 a barrel, while U.S. crude futures also rose about 0.9 percent to $31.17.

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