* Asia ex-Japan equity valuation lowest since March 2003
* Treasuries rise, US stock futures down as questions linger
* Signs of stabilisation in overnight lending among banks (Repeats to additional subscribers with no change to text) (Updates prices, adds European outlook)
By Kevin Plumberg
HONG KONG, Sept 22 (Reuters) - Asian stocks climbed on Monday, after more details about the U.S. government's $700 billion crisis solution encouraged bargain hunting, but questions lingered about long-term implications and the economic outlook.
The U.S. dollar fell against the yen and Swiss franc, and U.S. Treasury debt prices edged up, with market participants playing it safe before the plan is ironed out in Congress.
Stock futures were indicating major European markets would open largely steady on Monday. The FTSEurofirst 300 index <
> surged 8.2 percent on Friday, its largest single-day gain ever.Willingness among investors to take more risk for higher returns slowly returned, after news of what is likely the biggest bailout in U.S. history surfaced on Friday, capping an historic week in which Lehman Brothers <LEHMQ.PK> filed for bankruptcy, Washington rescued insurer American International Group <AIG.N> and Bank of America <BAC.N> bought Merrill Lynch <MER.N>.
Many aspects of the plan have yet to be worked out and tensions have already arisen over Congressional efforts to curb the executive pay of programme participants. However, analysts and investors were looking beyond the days of massive writedowns and focusing more on where growth will come from.
"The $700 billion plan should stem the bleeding. However, the patient is still fragile," said Thomas Lam, senior Treasury economist with United Overseas Bank in Singapore. "Essentially, the focus, I think, should shift to some extent from the state of illiquid securities to fundamentals of the U.S. economy and availability of capital."
Japan's Nikkei share average <
> closed up 1.4 percent, after hitting a three-year low last week. The index has rebounded around 7 percent in two days.Outside of Japan, stocks in the Asia-Pacific region were up 2.4 percent, bouncing further from a two-year low plumbed on Thursday, according to an MSCI index <.MIAPJ0000PUS>.
In the four weeks to Sept 18, amid sheer panic around the world with regard to the stability of the financial system, the index was trading at 10.1 times forecast earnings for 2009 -- the cheapest valuation for an upcoming year since March 2003, according to Thomson One.
China's main stock index, the Shanghai composite <
>, rose 7 percent as investors dove back in the worst performing market in the world so far this year.The Chinese government said on Thursday it would buy shares in the market, including beaten-up stocks of the country's top banks, in its strongest effort to improve investor confidence and turn the equity market around.
PICKING UP THE PIECES
Investors around the world were still grappling with the repercussions of last week's financial earthquake that leveled Wall Street.
Goldman Sachs <GS.N> and Morgan Stanley <MS.N> got approval to become bank holding companies regulated by the Federal Reserve on Monday [
]. That marked an unceremonious end to the investment banking model, which involved buying, repackaging and then selling complex credit products that created a massive tiger trap once the underlying debt went into default.Some analysts also became concerned about the long-term impact of having the U.S. government open up its balance sheet to illiquid securities whose price is difficult to find.
The bailout plan itself would burden U.S. taxpayers even more after the effective nationalisation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac earlier this month and would weigh on the U.S. fiscal position, putting the world's largest debtor even more in the hole.
U.S. stocks looked set to open weaker on Monday, with S&P 500 index futures <SPc1> down 0.6 percent. That was on the heels of Friday's massive rally in stocks worldwide -- the largest ever one-day advance as measured by market value. The MSCI all-country world equity index <.MIWD00000PUS> added more than $1.5 trillion in value on the day.
The U.S. dollar fell against the yen and the euro, as dealers awaited further details of the bailout plan.
The dollar fell nearly a full yen to 106.55 yen <JPY=>, while the euro rose 0.1 percent to $1.4480 <EUR=> after earlier touching a three-week high around $1.4560.
"The market has come out of a near panic stage after the U.S. government plan," said Tohru Sasaki, chief forex strategist at JPMorgan Chase Bank in Tokyo. "But we're still far from being able to say the problems are solved as we don't know yet how effective the newly created U.S. facility will be. The market looks set to remain unstable for a while," he said.
The 10-year U.S. Treasury note yield <US10YT=RR>, which moves in the opposite direction of the price, slipped to 3.77 percent after jumping nearly 30 basis points on Friday to 3.81 percent.
The short-end of the market reflected slightly reduced demand for very short-term liquidity, with yields on 3-month and 6-month bills above 1 percent after dropping to near zero last week as investors bailed wholesale out of money market funds.
Also, overnight U.S. dollar borrowing rates were around 3 percent on Monday, only slightly above the federal funds rate. During the most dire days of the crisis, the rate rose to 6 percent in the Asian session and had hit 10 percent at one point during the European session.
The October U.S. light crude contract <CLc1> was up slightly at $104.90 a barrel, while gold in the spot market <XAU=> dipped to around $868 an ounce. (Additional reporting by Satomi Noguchi in TOKYO; Editing by Lincoln Feast)