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			 The dollar edged higher versus a basket of currencies. It fell 
			broadly on Friday after the government in Kiev said its artillery 
			had partially destroyed a Russian armored column, while Russia 
			denied its forces had crossed into Ukraine. 
 Brent crude oil prices fell more than $1 to trade below $103, 
			erasing a similar rise on Friday blamed on the Ukraine tensions and 
			as Libya, another trouble spot, increased supply.
 
 Fears Friday's clash could have prompted a military response from 
			Moscow proved unfounded, though fighting between Ukrainian forces 
			and pro-Moscow separatists continued.
 
 Kiev said on Sunday its troops had raised the national flag over a 
			police station in the rebel stronghold of Luhansk.
 
 
            
			 
			The foreign ministers of Russia, Ukraine, France and Germany met in 
			Berlin. Russia's Sergei Lavrov said no progress had been towards a 
			ceasefire but that all issues related to a Russian humanitarian 
			convoy heading for Ukraine had been resolved.
 
 "There are some hopes that they might be able to make some 
			diplomatic progress ... But the two sides are still far off a 
			diplomatic solution and it shouldn't be a trigger for a Bund 
			sell-off," said Nick Stamenkovic, a bond strategist at RIA Capital 
			Markets.
 
 The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 stock index  was 1.3 percent 
			higher, reversing Friday's losses. Germany's Russia-exposed DAX 
			index added 1.7 percent.
 
 Russian shares and the rouble also firmed.
 
 Asian shares traded broadly flat. MSCI's main measure of 
			Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan  was down 0.03 percent.
 
 Wall Street initially took a hit on Friday after the report of the 
			attack on the Russian column but later pared losses. The Dow Jones 
			Industrial average,  which briefly turned negative for the 
			year, and S&P 500 indexes both fell but the tech-heavy Nasdaq  
			rose.
 
 Yields on U.S. Treasury bonds, often sought at times of heightened 
			tension, fell on Friday. Ten-year bonds <US10YT=RR> hit 2.34 
			percent, their lowest since mid-June 2013, but traded above 2.36 
			percent on Monday.
 
 Yields on German 10-year debt, the euro zone benchmark, rose 1.9 
			basis points to 0.994 percent, still close to record lows.
 
 IRISH YIELDS
 
 Irish 10-year yields fell 2.9 bps to 1.97 percent after Fitch 
			upgraded Ireland's credit rating to A-minus on Friday, citing 
			progress on its finances over the last year. It completed an 85 
			billion euro bailout program last year.
 
            
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			In currency markets, the euro was less than 0.1 percent down at 
			$1.3388, still close to a nine-month low of $1.3333 hit on Aug. 6. 
			The dollar edged up to 102.47 yen.
 Analysts said dollar moves were likely to be restrained by the wait 
			for the annual meeting of central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming 
			at the end of the week.
 
			Adam Myers, head of European FX strategy with Credit Agricole in 
			London, said there were particular risks to the dollar against the 
			euro.
 "The euro tried several times to break out higher last week and was 
			stopped each time around $1.34. I think the danger is we may see 
			that (barrier) broken this week."
 
 Sterling, which ended of Friday with it sixth consecutive weekly 
			fall as a lack of wage growth pushed back expectations of when the 
			Bank of England would raise interest rates, rose on Monday after BoE 
			Governor Mark Carney said in a newspaper interview on Sunday a rise 
			in real wages was not a pre-condition for a rate hike.
 
 The pound was last up 0.2 percent at $1.6733, having hit a 
			four-month low of $1.6657 on Thursday.
 
 
			
			 
			Brent crude for October delivery was last down 1 percent at $102.52 
			a barrel, reflecting reduced political tension and the Libyan supply 
			increase.
 
 Gold slipped below $1,300 an ounce in Asia and was last trading at 
			$1,300.85.
 
 (Additional reporting by Marius Zaharia in London and Shinichi 
			Saoshiro in Tokyo, editing by John Stonestreet)
 
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