By Jeremy Gaunt, European Investment Correspondent
LONDON, Feb 1 (Reuters) - European shares rose sharply on Friday, driven by news of a U.S.-Chinese stake in mining giant Rio Tinto, while currency and bond markets focused on pending U.S. jobs data as a guide to the state of its world-leading economy.
Chinese aluminium company Chinalco said it had bought a 12 percent stake in Rio Tinto <RIO.L> jointly with U.S. producer Alcoa <AA.N>.
This lifted the European mining sector and bolstered stock indexes generally. The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index <
> was up more than 1.4 percent.The U.S. jobs data due at 1330 GMT, however, hovered in the background.
"Later on, top down numbers to be released for the U.S. will be setting the tone ... Obviously the January labour market report will be of most importance," said Heino Ruland, analyst at FrankfurtFinanz.
The non-farm payrolls release is expected to show a median 80,000 new jobs created in the month, compared with 18,000 in December, according to economists polled by Reuters.
Investors will be looking to see whether the data is better or worse than expected in relation to the U.S. economy's slide toward recession.
"Anything under 100,000 will fit the macro picture as we know it," said Nomura rate strategist Charles Diebel.
Earlier, Japan's Nikkei index <
> closed down 0.7 percent in part because of position squaring by investors wary of the data."Wall Street may have risen yesterday, but many of the economic indicators that have been coming out recently are poor, raising concerns about the jobs data," said Nagayuki Yamagishi, a strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities.
WAITING FOR JOBS
The dollar held steady within a cent of record lows against the euro and at weak levels against other major currencies, as traders bided time ahead of the U.S. data.
"There's a lot of uncertainty on this number. You just have to see the wide range of forecasts. You need to see something pretty strong to boost the dollar short term -- in the region of 155,000. Anything below that, I doubt we'll see too much (dollar-positive) reaction," said Mitul Kotecha, head of global FX strategy at Calyon in London.
The dollar was flat against a basket of major currencies at 75.19, close to the two-month low just below 75.00 touched on Thursday.
The euro was steady on the day at $1.4865 <EUR=>, eyeing a move above $1.49 toward the record high of $1.4966 and the psychological target of $1.50.
Euro zone government bonds slipped following Thursday's rally on the U.S. Federal Reserve's second rate cut in just over a week, a total of 125 basis points altogether.
Two-year yields <EU2YT=RR> were 2.2 basis points higher at 3.404 percent, while 10-year yields <EU10YT=RR> were 1.9 basis points higher at 3.949 percent.