* Commodity sector boosts Asia stocks to 2-year high
* Japan's Nikkei up 2 pct after yen selloff overnight
* Asia braces for more capital inflows post Fed
(Repeats to addtional subscribers)
By Kevin Plumberg
HONG KONG, Nov 4 (Reuters) - Japanese stocks rallied 2 percent on Thursday after the Federal Reserve's new bond buying programme was close enough to expectations to keep investors selling yen and searching for higher-yielding assets.
For more on the Fed's latest push to bolster the U.S. recovery, click [
]After falling overnight, the U.S. dollar stabilised, with dealers hesitant to add to sizable bets against the currency after the euro touched a 10-month high, though traders pushed up copper and oil prices anyway.
Asian stocks edged up to a two-year high in the wake of the Fed decision, mainly because of buying in the resources sector, though reaction overall was muted.
There also was still a plethora of events left this week that could inject volatility in asset markets, including policy meetings of the Bank of England, Bank of Japan and European Central Bank as well as the October U.S. payrolls report.
For Asia, after the Fed pledged to buy $600 billion of mostly mid-maturity Treasury debt, increased capital flows into the region will probably accelerate a process of reflation but also heighten the risk of more stringent capital controls.
"By undertaking more Treasury bond purchases, the hope is that risk appetite will provide the catalyst for people to spend, particularly corporates," Sean Darby, Asia strategist with Nomura in Hong Kong, said in a note.
"We expect Asian equities to remain well bid but the additional QE will raise the spectre of capital controls in ASEAN and parts of North Asia."
* Japan's Nikkei share average was up 1.9 percent <
>, with shares of big exporters among the biggest lifts to the index after the yen sold off overnight.* The MSCI index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan edged up 0.4 percent <.MIAPJ0000PUS> to the highest since June 2008. Commodity-related stocks were early winners in Asia after the Fed decision.
* The euro was at $1.4110 <EUR=>, basically flat on the day after hitting $1.4175 on Wednesday.
* The dollar was up slightly against the yen at 81.14 yen <JPY=>, on pace for a fourth day of gains.
* Dealers were quickly finding other themes to trade after the Fed. The U.S. dollar was up 0.4 percent against the Canadian dollar at C$1.0092 after the Canadian government surprised markets with a decision to block BHP Billiton's $39 billion bid for Potash Corp <POT.TO>. [
]* 10-year U.S. Treasury futures rose 0.5 percent to a one-month high, while in the cash market, 5-year Treasury yields slipped 3 basis points to 1.08 percent, with 43 percent of the Fed's new plans for bond buying falling between 4 and 7 year maturities. * Three-month copper traded on the London Metal Exchange was up 1 percent to $8,399.75 a tonne <CMCU3>, creeping back toward a two-year high reached last week Tuesday.
(Editing by Jonathan Thatcher)