GLOBAL MARKETS-Europe stumbles as firm Fed reins in China rally

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Fed rebuttal of rate cut bets keeps Europe's stocks subdued

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Hang Seng touches six-month top, yuan sets four-month high

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Oil bounces after heavy slide on recession angst

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Benchmark government bond yields tick higher after falls

By Marc Jones

LONDON, Jan 5 (Reuters) - Europe's markets suffered an early stumble on Thursday as a firm message from the Fed that it won't be cutting interest rates any time soon offset optimism around China's phasing out of COVID restrictions.

News that China's mainland border with Hong Kong will be reopened after three years had sent Asian-Pacific shares outside Japan to a four-month high overnight, but with both the dollar and bond market borrowing costs higher post-Fed, Europe couldn't keep up.

The pan-European STOXX slipped 0.3% after gaining more than 3% in its first three sessions of 2023 and Wall Street futures prices were pointing to a similar fall later.

London's FTSE did manage a small rise as better-than-expected numbers from retail giant Next lifted the entire European sector, but that couldn't make up for the broader falls in Frankfurt and Paris .

"Everyone expected a hawkish message and that is what we got," said MUFG's Head of Research for Global Markets EMEA, Derek Halpenny.

"Really it's now about payrolls (U.S jobs data) tomorrow," he added, explaining that the labour market will be a big factor in how high inflation remains this year.

"A strong print tomorrow and I think you are going to get a fairly rapid repricing for a 50 bps hikes at the next (Fed) meeting."

Markets are clearly being tugged in different directions though.

China has abruptly dropped ultra-strict curbs on travel and activity, fanning hopes that once the infection waves pass, its giant economic motors can start firing again and offset some of the slowdowns being seen in other parts of the world.

Thursday's biggest Asian gains included E-commerce and consumer stocks in Hong Kong thanks to the China mainland border news, which drove the Hang Seng to a six-month high.

The yuan also rose about 0.2% to 6.8750 to a four-month high and also supported other currencies such as the Thai baht which, as Thailand is now expected to see a mass return of Chinese holidaymakers, has surged nearly 14% in less than 3 months.

"China reopening has a big impact...worldwide," said Joanne Goh, an investment strategist at DBS Bank in Singapore, since it not only spurs tourism and consumption but can ease some of the supply-chain crunches seen during 2022.