* U.S. debt worry dampens recovery hopes, stocks
* Asia stocks soften after hitting 7-month peak, Nikkei up
* JGB 10-year yield hits 6-month high on U.S. Treasuries
* NZ dlr rebounds after S&P revises outlook to stable
* European shares expected to open lower (Repeats item to more subscribers without changes in text)
By Aiko Hayashi
TOKYO, May 28 (Reuters) - Asian shares fell on Thursday from seven-month highs as concerns grew rising U.S. government debt yields could push up borrowing costs and choke off a potential recovery in the world's largest economy.
Major European stocks were expected to open lower as much as 1.4 percent following weakness in Asian stocks and on Wall Street, financial bookmakers said.
Investors will likely focus on General Motors <GM.N> as it moved closer to filing the largest bankruptcy ever for a U.S. industrial company after a crucial bond exchange proposal failed, while the fate of GM's European brand Opel remained uncertain after marathon talks with German officials ended without a deal. [
]U.S. home sales picked up in April, but the positive sign was outweighed by worries that the U.S. government was incurring too much debt as it tries to spend its way out of recession, sending Treasury prices falling along with stocks. [
] [ ]"Though the chances of General Motors going into Chapter 11 are quite high, the market is currently watching the long-term direction of the economy even more," said Masayoshi Yano, senior market analyst at Meiwa Securities in Tokyo.
The benchmark 10-year yield on Japanese government bonds hit a six-month high after U.S. Treasury debt prices came under heavy selling pressure on supply concerns.
Underscoring the intense pressure on government finances, New Zealand unveiled its biggest fiscal deficit in 25 years and forecast up to 10 years of deficits and rising debt in a budget aimed at supporting the economy while averting a credit downgrade. [
]The New Zealand dollar climbed 0.6 percent to $0.6187 <NZD=D4>, having fallen after the budget news. It hit a 7-month high of $0.6262 on Tuesday. [
]The MSCI index of Asian stocks outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> had shed 0.3 percent as of 0605 GMT, after ending Wednesday trade at its highest level since last October when markets were tumbling in the wake of the collapse of Lehman Brothers.
Japan's Nikkei average <
> closed 0.1 percent higher in choppy trade on Thursday, supported by hopes that the Japanese economy may have seen its worst phase and is headed for a recovery.Japan's exports showed modest signs of recovery in April, providing another sign that the slump in global trade may have bottomed. [
]The Japanese market is looking to Friday's Japanese April industrial output numbers, which economists expect to show a rise for the second consecutive month as manufacturers ramped up production after working down inventories. [
]Elsewhere in Asia, Hong Kong and Chinese markets were closed on Thursday for a holiday. The main indexes in South Korea <
> closed up 2.2 percent, while Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index < > fell 1.2 percent.MIXED SENTIMENT
The dollar held steady against the euro, clinging to the gains it made on Wednesday.
Investors move funds into riskier assets when they become more optimistic about the outlook for the U.S. and global economy, but they probably still lack conviction about a recovery, said a trader for a Japanese trust bank.
"People's views are mixed, there is both optimism and pessimism," the trader said.
The euro was little changed at $1.3830 <EUR=>, having pulled back from a five-month high of $1.4051 hit on trading platform EBS last week.
But the dollar jumped to its highest in more than a week against the yen and edged up against a basket of currencies, building on gains made on Wednesday after the second of three large U.S. Treasury auctions this week drew solid investor demand.
The dollar rose 1.3 percent against the yen to 96.54 yen <JPY=>, pulling away from a two-month low of 93.85 yen hit last week.
The Australian dollar rose 1.2 percent against the yen to 75.10 yen <AUDJPY=R> and the euro gained 1.3 percent to 133.52 yen <EURJPY=R>.
JGB futures closed unchanged at 136.36 <2JGBv1> after dipping as low as 136.02, their lowest since Oct 22.
Benchmark 10-year yields rose 1 basis point to 1.480, but rose as high as 1.500 percent <JP10YTN=JBTC> earlier, the highest since Nov. 17.
Buying remained limited as market participants awaited the U.S. Treasury's auction of $26 billion in seven-year notes -- the last of this week's three auctions totalling $101 billion.
Crude prices <CLc1> fell 55 cents to below $63 a barrel on concerns that a U.S. economic recovery could be delyed.
Oil hit a six-month high near $64 a barrel on Wednesday after Saudi Arabia, OPEC's biggest member, said the global economy had strengthened enough to cope with oil at $75 to $80 a barrel.
The comments came ahead of an OPEC policy review on Thursday. [
] (Additional reporting by Elaine Lies and Masayuki Kitano in Tokyo)