* Asian equity markets, commodities steadier after fall
* Dollar bounce loses steam
* Market seen volatile in lead up to FOMC meeting
By Ian Chua
SYDNEY, Oct 28 (Reuters) - Asian stock markets rose on Thursday, having suffered their biggest one-day fall in four months, as a rebound in the dollar paused after the greenback recovered all of its losses against major currencies this year.
The selloff in commodities also halted with copper, which dropped more than $200 a tonne on Tuesday, its steepest decline since late June, gaining $28 to $8,328 a tonne.
Financial markets have been volatile this week as speculation intensifies over how much the Federal Reserve is likely to spend to pump up a faltering recovery and whether such new measures will be carried out swiftly or phased in over time.
Analysts expect choppy market action to persist in the lead up to the Nov. 2-3 policy-setting meeting.
The latest Reuters survey showed most leading economists expect the Fed to buy between $80 billion and $100 billion worth of assets per month, with estimates for how much it will eventually spend varying from $250 billion to $2 trillion.
In a similar Reuters poll of primary dealers on Oct. 8, dealers mostly forecast the total size of the new programme at $500 billion to $1.5 trillion. [
]Market participants have begun to scale back expectations of the Fed's intentions. The Wall Street Journal said on Wednesday the Fed is likely to unveil an asset-purchase program worth a few hundred billion dollars over several months.
It said officials want to avoid a "shock and awe" approach in their announcement, expected next week. For details, see [
].<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ For a survey on size of QE, click [
] For possible FOMC outcomes, click [ ] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks outside Japan rose 0.6 percent <.MIAPJ0000PUS>, having slid nearly 2 percent on Tuesday -- its biggest one-day percentage fall since late June. Still, it remained close to a 28-month high hit last week."It's going to remain volatile. If nothing else, markets are a bit overbought short term," said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy at AMP Capital Investors in Sydney.
Japan's Nikkei stock average <
>, which was spared the selloff seen in the region on Tuesday, slipped 0.1 percent, while Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index < > rose 1.1 percent and Korea's KOSPI < > gained 0.1 percent.Among the top performers, shares in Canon Inc <7751.T> rallied more than 4 percent, after the world's largest maker of digital cameras posted strong quarterly results and raised its full-year outlook.
"Shares of firms with bullish earnings are being snapped up, but that hasn't spread to similar stocks or sectors as investors are generally more concerned about the implications from today's BOJ meeting and the U.S. Federal Reserve meeting next week," said Mitsuo Shimizu, deputy general manager at Cosmo Securities.
In Australia, upbeat earnings helped drive ANZ shares <ANZ.AX> up 3.2 percent, while bourse operator ASX <ASX.AX> climbed about 2 percent after two days of sharp losses due to uncertainty over Singapore Exchange's <SGXL.SI> $7.9 billion bid.
The MSCI's emerging market stock benchmark <.MSCIEF> edged up 0.1 percent.
DOLLAR PAUSES
The U.S. dollar eased against a basket of six major currencies <.DXY> after two straight days of gains helped the index climb back into positive territory for 2010.
The euro rose to $1.3801 <EUR=> from $1.3764 late in New York, while the dollar eased to 81.62 yen <JPY=> from 81.69 yen, hovering not far from a record low of 79.75 yen.
"We suspect the Fed will confirm that medium-term deflation risks still justify easing, and with 10-year rates now above Jackson Hole levels, the resulting rally in bonds should soften the dollar again," said JPMorgan analyst Justin Kariya.
U.S. 10-year yields <US10YT=RR> were up for the sixth session in a row at 2.72 percent, effectively lifting them above levels seen in late August when the Fed warned more policy easing was needed at a central banker's meeting in Jackson Hole.
The New Zealand dollar was one of the best performers early in Asia after brushing aside a widely expected decision by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand to hold rates steady at 3 percent.
The kiwi dollar <NZD=D4> was last at $0.7477 versus $0.7439 late in New York. Also firmer, the Aussie dollar <AUD=D4> rose to $0.9742 from $0.9718.
U.S. light sweet crude oil <CLc1> was little changed at $82.00 per barrel while spot gold <XAU=> was 0.2 percent higher at $1,326.67 an ounce.
(Additional reporting by Aiko Hayashi in Tokyo, Koh Gui Qing in Sydney and Manuela Badawy in New York)