* U.S. dollar bounces, while oil and gold fade
* Obama visits Asia with trade and currencies in focus
* Most Asian shares soft on U.S. consumer concerns (Repeats to more subscribers)
By Wayne Cole
SYDNEY, Nov 13 (Reuters) - A rare rally in the U.S. dollar was the focus in Asia on Friday as investors wondered if President Barack Obama's nine-day visit to the region would generate pressure on some countries to let their currencies rise.
The bounce in the long-suffering dollar added to profit-taking in commodities such as gold and oil, while weakness in shares across Asia supported the dollar as a safe-haven trade. Obama kicks off his first official tour of Asia by meeting Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama on Friday, then goes on to Singapore, China and South Korea. [
], High on the agenda will be U.S. calls for Asian countries to do more to stimulate domestic demand instead of relying on exports to America. That would likely require much of Asia, and China in particular, to let their currencies appreciate. But there's an inherent contradiction in the U.S. stance.Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner often states his desire to see a strong dollar, yet at the same time wants Asian exporters to let their currencies gain ground against the dollar.
Leaders of Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation seemed to give ground this week by backing undefined "market-oriented" exchange rates. Yet many of the same countries were spotted intervening to buy the dollar to stop a rise in their own currencies that could make their exports less competitive and impede their economic recovery.
Traders said this burst of buying caught many speculators short and was a major reason the U.S. dollar bounced so far.
The euro had pulled back to $1.4858 <EUR=>, from Thursday's peak around $1.5048, while the dollar reached 90.30 yen <JPY=> from the week's 89.26 trough.
Against a basket of currencies the dollar <.DXY> <=USD> was up at 75.596 and off 15-mth lows of 74.774, though it remains within a downtrend channel that stretches back to May.
The dollar's rise added to pressure on oil, already burdened by a surprisingly large increase in U.S. crude inventories. U.S. crude oil futures for December delivery <CLc1> were off 38 cents at $76.56, after shedding 3 percent on Thursday.
Likewise, spot gold was dragged down to $1,103.60 per ounce <XAU=>, from a record peak of $1,122.95.
U.S. CONSUMER FATIGUE
Most share markets in Asia tracked Thursday's fall in U.S. stocks, which snapped a six-day winning streak.
The Dow Jones average dropped 0.91 percent on Thursday to 10,197.47, while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index <.SPX> fell 1.03 percent to 1,087.24.
The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> followed on Friday, sliding 0.9 percent at 407.24.
Some market watchers blamed the reversal on concerns about U.S. shoppers. A return of strong consumer demand is vital for a sustainable recovery in the world's largest economy.
On Thursday, Wal-Mart Stores Inc <WMT.N> forecast earnings during the key holiday quarter could miss Wall Street estimates as its customers face rising unemployment. [
]"It is inevitable for exporters in Korea and China to be hit as U.S. retailers are unlikely to enjoy the holiday shopping season," said Choo Hee-yeop, a strategist at Korea Investment & Securities.
In Japan, the benchmark Nikkei <
> fell 0.5 percent after snapping a four-day rising streak on Thursday and looked headed for its lowest close in a week. The broader Topix < > was flat at 867.50.Struggling Japan Airlines Corp <9205.T> as well as a slew of banks including No. 2 lender Mizuho Financial Group <8411.T> and No. 3 bank Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group <8316.T> announce earnings results later in the day. (Editing by Kim Coghill)