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RTRS:FOREX-Euro rises, but IMF says no talks with Italian govt
 
* IMF Spokesperson says no talks with Italian govt on financing

* Italian newspaper report sparks hopes of IMF aid for Italy

* Euro rises on short-covering but off day's high

* Euro faces resistance at 5-day moving average

By Masayuki Kitano

SINGAPORE, Nov 28 (Reuters) - The euro rose on Monday after an Italian newspaper said the International Monetary Fund was preparing an aid package for Italy, but doubts about the feasibility of the reported plan helped limit its gains.

The euro pushed higher on short-covering after an unsourced report in Italian daily La Stampa said up to 600 billion euros could be made available at a rate of between 4-5 percent to give Italy breathing space for 18 months.

In response to media queries on Monday, an IMF spokesperson said there were no discussions with the Italian authorities on a program for IMF financing.

The Italian newspaper report helped soothe market nerves as Italy plans to raise up to 8 billion euros in the bond market on Tuesday. But market players remained skeptical as the amount seemed beyond the IMF's current capacity.

Doubts grew after Dow Jones quoted international financial officials as saying reports of an IMF package for Italy were not credible, which caused the euro to trim some of its gains.

Earlier, a source with knowledge of the matter told Reuters that contacts between the IMF and Rome had intensified but added it was unclear what form of support could be offered if a market selloff on Monday forced immediate action.

Official sources in Rome said they were unaware of any request for assistance from Italy.

The euro was last changing hands at $1.3306, up 0.5 percent on the day, but down from an intraday high near $1.3345.

While the IMF may potentially employ a stand-by or precautionary lending facility for Italy, aid amounting to 600 billion euros sounds far too large, said Ray Farris, head of foreign exchange strategy for Credit Suisse in Singapore.

"It would imply that the fund (IMF) would give all of its existing resources plus additional resources it would have to tap from its members for once country, and that seems highly imprudent," he said.

There are some "potential positives" for the euro that have emerged in recent days including news last week that the European Central Bank is looking at extending the terms of loans it offers banks to 2 or even 3 years, but its outlook hinges on forthcoming policy decisions by euro zone members such as France and Germany as well as the European Central Bank, Farris said.

SELLING INTO STRENGTH

The euro faces initial resistance near $1.3350 , the 5-day moving average. Higher up, it faces resistance near $1.3414, the conversion line on the daily Ichimoku chart, a popular technical analysis tool.

It has fallen some 7 percent -- from a high of $1.4248 on Oct. 27 to a trough near $1.3213 on Nov. 25 -- as the debt crisis spread through Europe.

Selling pressure on the euro strengthened last week in the wake of a weak bond auction in Germany, the euro zone's safest haven. Italy's short-term debt sale on Friday was also poorly received, sending Italian two-year yields to a euro-era high above 8 percent on Friday.

The bounce in the euro saw the dollar index fall 0.6 percent to 79.231, retreating from a two-month peak of 79.702 set Friday. Against the yen, the dollar dipped 0.2 percent to 77.63.

Commodity currencies followed the euro higher, with the Australian dollar surging 1.4 percent to $0.9853 , having climbed to as high as $0.9888 earlier on Monday.

Euro zone finance ministers will meet on Tuesday where detailed operational rules for the euro zone's bailout fund are ready for approval, documents obtained by Reuters showed.

The approval of the rules will clear the way for the 440 billion euro facility to attract cash from private and public investors to its co-investment funds in coming weeks, which, depending on interest, could multiply the EFSF's resources.

Meanwhile, Moody's Investors Service warned on Monday the rapid escalation of the euro zone sovereign and banking crisis threatens the credit standing of all European government bond ratings. ((masayuki.kitano@thomsonreuters.com +65-6417-4682)(RM:masayuki.kitano.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net )
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