* Fed expected to cut, speculation grows of BoJ easing
* Yen edges up but stands lower on the week vs U.S. dollar
* Oil climbs above $65 as stocks rally (Repeats to additional subscribers with no change to text)
By Kevin Plumberg
HONG KONG, Oct 29 (Reuters) - Asian stocks and government bonds rallied on Wednesday, on hopes the Bank of Japan and the Federal Reserve will deliver interest rate cuts this week to support the sharply slowing global economy.
Oil prices also rose as investors latched on to the upward momentum in global equities, hoping for a sustained revival in willingness to take risks for higher returns.
Attractive valuations in almost every industry inspired the stock market rally, taking place less than two weeks after Japan's Nikkei index posted its biggest single-day decline since the 1987 crash.
The Fed is widely expected to cut its key rate for the ninth time since September 2007 later on Wednesday, and the Bank of Japan will consider lowering its policy rate at a meeting on Friday, according to sources familiar with the matter. [
]How much either action will turn around near-term prospects for the U.S. and Japanese economies is unclear, especially since the U.S. labour market is forecast to have lost nearly 180,000 jobs this month and economists from JPMorgan to UBS see the global economy sliding into recession.
The Nikkei <
> jumped 7.7 percent, after plumbing the lowest since 1982 on Tuesday. The index is still down 21 percent in October, causing speculation that Japanese banks have likely taken big hits on their domestic portfolios."Hopes of a BOJ rate cut are everything," said Masayoshi Okamoto, head of trading at Jujiya Securities in Tokyo. "But as long as the dollar is below 100 yen there will be worries about Japanese company earnings in the second half of this business year, and this will limit the Nikkei's rebound."
Nomura Holdings Inc, <8604.T> Japan's largest brokerage, posted its third consecutive quarterly net loss on Tuesday and warned of potential losses on exposure to crisis-hit Iceland and further write-downs on its stake in Fortress Investment Group. <FIG.N>.
Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan climbed almost 3 percent after touching a 4-year low on Tuesday, according to an MSCI index <.MIAPJ0000PUS>.
Wall Street overnight posted its second-biggest rise ever, with the Standard & Poor's 500 index <.SPX> spiking 10.8 percent.
The U.S. dollar was down slightly on the day at 97.96 yen <JPY=> compared with around 98.50 late in New York. Still, the dollar has gained nearly 4 yen in three days as global equity markets rallied.
The yen has received a powerful boost as Japanese investors close out of overseas trades and bring money back home.
The two-year Japanese government bond yield, which moves in the opposite direction to the price, hit a six-month low of 0.60 percent <JP2YTN=JBTC> in anticipation of a central bank rate cut.
U.S. crude futures were trading up $2.81 at $65.54 barrel <CLc1>, after rising as high as $65.80 just minutes earlier. In the last month alone, oil has dropped $43 as a deep slowdown in demand is factored in. (Additional reporting by Elaine Lies in TOKYO, editing by Dhara Ranasinghe)