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			 European markets followed Asia into the red, with Britain's FTSE, 
			Germany's DAX and France's CAC all 0.7 percent lower in early 
			trading, to leave MSCI's 46-country All World index down 0.3 
			percent. 
			 
			Souring sentiment toward riskier assets in turn lifted safe-havens 
			such as the Japanese yen, U.S. Treasuries, German Bunds and gold, 
			while the pressure was firmly back on oil as both Brent and WTI fell 
			$2 to near $35.50 a barrel. 
			 
			"The moves in yuan have been very interesting," Societe Generale FX 
			strategist Alvin Tan said. 
			 
			"The CNH (offshore yuan) is down 2 percent since New Year's Eve ... 
			if they allow this to continue this has very serious repercussions 
			for global markets." 
			 
			Traders and economists fear the yuan's depreciation may mean the 
			world's second-biggest economy is even weaker than had been expected 
			and that it could trigger another wave of competitive devaluations 
			around Asia and in other key economies. 
			  
			  
			 
			The People's Bank of China surprised on Wednesday by setting the 
			yuan's official midpoint rate at its weakest level in 4-1/2 years at 
			6.5314 per dollar. That triggered further selling in the 'offshore' 
			yuan, which slumped to 6.6956 per dollar, its lowest since trading 
			began in 2010. 
			 
			There was more gloomy Chinese economic data to digest, too, with a 
			PMI survey showing services sector activity expanded at its slowest 
			rate in 17 months in December. 
			 
			State Chinese media meanwhile reported that a selling ban on major 
			shareholders brought in to help arrest a market crash last summer 
			would remain in place until the government publishes new rules on 
			such disposals. 
			 
			That helped drive China's blue chip shares sharply higher, with the 
			CSI300 index closing up 1.75 percent and the Shanghai Composite 
			finishing 2.3 percent better off. 
			 
			They were among very few risers, however, as North Korea's 
			announcement that it had successfully conducted a test of a hydrogen 
			nuclear device added to geopolitical worries stirred by a row 
			between Saudi Arabia and Iran. 
			 
			South Korea's KOSPI and the won both fell and Japan's Nikkei 
			extended losses to close down 1 percent. 
			 
			In Europe, a 2.5 percent fall in mining and natural resource stocks 
			left the FTSEurofirst 300 0.7 percent lower at 1,400. 
			 
			
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			Another PMI showed growth in Britain's dominant services sector 
			slowed slightly in December, suggesting one of Europe's best 
			performing economies over the last couple of years expanded only 
			modestly in the final part of 2015. 
			 
			OIL PRESSURE 
			 
			The mood was similarly cautious in currency and bond markets, with 
			the yuan's accelerated fall dragging down other emerging currencies 
			like the Malaysian ringgit and Thai baht. 
			 
			The dollar touched a near three-month low of 118.35 yen while euro 
			slid to a nine-month trough of 127.465 yen and dipped to $1.0720 as 
			a top European Central Bank policymaker reiterated its willingness 
			to keep printing money. 
			 
			That also helped push yields on German 10-year Bunds to their lowest 
			since the ECB's last meeting in December, which delivered less in 
			terms of policy stimulus then most traders had been expecting. The 
			10-year U.S. Treasury yield fell by about 3 basis points to 2.22 
			percent. 
			 
			"European government bond markets are enjoying a (balanced) 
			environment, with sliding inflation expectations augmenting the 
			lingering emerging market concerns," Commerzbank rate strategist 
			Michael Leister said. 
			 
			Adding to the risk-off mood, crude oil prices hit new 11-year lows 
			as the face-off between Saudi Arabia and Iran over Riyadh's 
			execution of a Shi'ite cleric was seen extinguishing any chance of 
			major producers cooperating to cut production. 
			
			  
			
			Global benchmark Brent crude was trading at $35.75 a barrel at 0930 
			GMT, down 67 cents or 1.9 percent from the previous day's settlement 
			and the lowest since 2004. 
			 
			U.S. crude futures were down 46 cents at $35.51 per barrel after 
			slipping 79 cents on Tuesday. 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Christine Kim and Yena Park in Seoul; Pete 
			Sweeney and Samuel Shen in Shanghai; Editing by Catherine Evans) 
			
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