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			 European shares opened higher, shrugging off falls in Asia after 
			early gains there, driven by a hefty cut in the amount of cash 
			Chinese banks must hold in reserves, faded. 
			 
			Sunday's 100 basis point cut by the Chinese central bank in the 
			reserve requirement ratio helped lift the Australian dollar against 
			its U.S. counterpart. China is the main export market for Australian 
			natural resources. 
			 
			The Chinese stimulus helped lift oil prices, which were also boosted 
			data on Friday showing the number of U.S. rigs drilling for crude 
			fell to its lowest since 2010. 
			 
			This, in turn, contributed to an early rise in European shares, led 
			higher by telecoms after a 1.3 billion euro bid by Telenet  for 
			Dutch KPN's <KPN.AS> mobile telephony unit in Belgium. 
			 
			The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 stocks index was up 0.7 percent at 
			1,620 points. Telenet, a subsidiary of cable company Liberty Global 
			rose 6 percent at one point and was last up 4.5 percent. KPN gained 
			2.2 percent. 
			
			  
			"It seems pretty good for both," Michael Bishop, an analyst at RBC 
			Capital Markets, said. "A slightly higher price for KPN than had 
			been speculated and slightly better synergies compared to market 
			expectations for Telenet." 
			 
			Earlier, Asian shares ended the day lower. MSCI's broadest index of 
			Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.9 percent while Tokyo's 
			Nikkei  lost 0.1 percent. 
			 
			Chinese shares erased gains as fears of a regulatory crackdown 
			offset the central bank measures. The CSI300 index <.CSI300> of the 
			largest listed companies in Shanghai and Shenzhen fell 1.6 percent. 
			 
			The Chinese stimulus measures pushed the Australian dollar to a 
			one-month high of $0.7844. It was last up 0.5 percent at $0.7809. 
			 
			"It's been the typical kneejerk reaction to additional stimulus in 
			China," said Lee Hardman, a strategist with Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi 
			UFJ in London. 
			 
			"That should just be temporary. So far the stimulus has had 
			relatively little impact in terms of preventing the slowdown in 
			China. We think there is more pressure on the Aussie to come." 
			
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			The euro was down 0.3 percent at $1.0779, having risen as far as 
			$1.0849 on Friday, after IMF and G20 meetings in Washington 
			generated no progress in Greece's prospects of doing a deal on 
			financial aid that would keep it in the single currency. 
			COLLATERAL 
			 
			France's central bank chief said Greek banks may soon run out of 
			collateral to access European Central Bank refinancing unless Athens 
			reaches an agreement with the European Union and International 
			Monetary Fund on economic reforms. 
			 
			Worries over Greece pushed German government bond yields lower. 
			Ten-year yields, the benchmark for euro zone borrowing costs, were 
			last 1.2 basis points lower at 0.07 percent, having fallen to 0.05 
			percent on Friday. 
			 
			Many in the market expect German 10-year yields to fall below zero. 
			 
			Brent crude was up some 30 cents at $63.79 a barrel, not far off 
			last week's four-month high of $64.95. The day's gains were pared 
			after Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said Saudi production would stay 
			near record highs in April. 
			 
			Gold held above $1,200 an ounce, supported by the weaker dollar. 
			
			  
			 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Francesco Canepa and Patrick Graham in 
			London and Lisa Twaronite in Tokyo; editing by John Stonestreet) 
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