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By Louise Heavens
SINGAPORE, May 9 (Reuters) - Oil's relentless surge to a new peak above $124 weighed on Asian shares on Friday, while a stronger yen pressured Japanese exporters, such as Toyota Motor.
The euro held onto its gains after bouncing back from a two-month low against the dollar on Thursday when the head of the European Central Bank dampened some expectations for rate cuts by signalling that fighting inflation was his top concern.
Japanese government bonds surged as investors rushed to lock in relatively high yields.
Crude oil's record breaking run had kept stocks on the back foot earlier this week as investors digested the prospect of what Goldman Sachs predicted could be a new spike to $200 a barrel.
By 0158 GMT, crude was up 61 cents at $124.34 a barrel <CLc1>, having hit an intraday record of $124.61 in after-hours electronic trading late in the New York day.
Despite rising oil prices, Wall Street found support on increased optimism that the U.S. economy, while softening, was not altogether cracking under the strain of the subprime crisis.
The Dow Jones industrial average <
> rose 0.4 percent, while the Nasdaq Composite Index < > added 0.5 percent. In Europe, shares fell slightly as both the ECB and the Bank of England kept rates on hold.AUTO CONCERNS
Tokyo's Nikkei average <
> was down 0.9 percent at the midsession, with the world's biggest automaker Toyota <7203.T> falling on the strong yen and after it forecast its first annual profit decline in seven years."Toyota's outlook is negative news for the overall auto industry. Investors have become wary about earnings by other automakers," said Katsuhiko Kodama, a senior strategist at Toyo Securities.
Shares across the rest of Asia <.MIAPJ0000PUS> fell 0.3 percent. The benchmark is down just under 8 percent so far this year.
Seoul <
> fell 1.1 percent, with refiners squeezed by ever rising oil prices. Singapore stocks <.FTSTI> dipped 0.2 percent and Taiwan < > opened 0.4 percent lower.But Australia <
> bucked the trend to notch up a 1.2 percent gain, boosted by miners and resources companies and banks after National Australia Bank <NAB.AX> reported upbeat earnings.EURO GROWTH
Despite the ECB's inflation focus, traders said the euro could come under renewed pressure against the dollar as the market shifts focus to selling currencies with a deteriorating growth outlook.
"Concern about slowing euro zone growth is still making the euro vulnerable," said a trader at a Japanese bank.
The dollar was little changed at 103.63 yen <JPY=> while the euro was also steady at 159.71 yen <EURJPY=R>.
Japanese government bonds surged, with the benchmark 10-year yield dropping sharply from a seven-month high as investors rushed to buy paper at higher yield levels after putting a poor 10-year debt sale behind them.
"Investors are buying as they figured that bond yields had limited scope for a further rise after seeing the market hanging in there despite a weak auction," said Atsushi Ito, JGB strategist at Morgan Stanley.
June 10-year futures climbed 0.98 points to 136.78. The benchmark 10-year yield fell 8.5 basis points to 1.555 percent <JP10YTN=JBTC>, well off a seven-month high of 1.680 percent struck this week.
In the precious metals' market, gold held near a one-week high as the euro firmed against the dollar. Spot gold <XAU=> hit a high of $884.20 an ounce, not far from Thursday's 1-week high of $885.25.
Platinum <XPT=> jumped to $2,034/$2,044 an ounce, its highest level since April 23 on speculative buying.