By Lionel Laurent
LONDON (Reuters) - The euro rose and shares slipped in Europe on Tuesday as mixed corporate earnings and concerns over Greece kept investors cautious ahead of a busy week which will include the first policy meeting of the U.S. Federal Reserve this year.
Russia was also in the spotlight after a cut to its credit rating dealt a further blow to the rouble, though by Tuesday the currency had regained some ground against the dollar.
Investors will be keen to hear the Fed's response to policy easing by global central banks such as the European Central Bank, whose long-awaited plan to buy bonds to revive the flagging euro zone economy has propelled bond yields and the euro to multi-year lows and stocks to multi-year highs.
Although core bond yields held near those lows, lower-rated bond yields rose after Europe signalled it would not yield to a new Greek government's demands for debt forgiveness, though it showed a willingness to give Athens more time to pay its debts. Top Greek shares <.ATG> were down 2.7 percent.
Credit markets were also jittery beyond the euro zone, with the cost of insuring exposure to Russia's debt up after Standard & Poor's cut Russia's sovereign credit rating to "junk" late on Monday, citing weakened economic growth prospects and Western sanctions over Ukraine.
"A lot of investors have been taken aback by the speed of macroeconomic adjustments," said Sean Darby, global equity strategist at Jefferies. "This is not the type of environment they like to invest in."
The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 equity index <.FTEU3> was down 0.7 percent. European heavyweights Philips
Top UK shares also fell after data showed Britain's economic growth slowed more than expected in the final three months of last year, though annual growth was still at its fastest since 2007.
"Today's earnings show that global demand remains the big issue. Companies can take advantage of low rates, they can buy back stock but they cannot create demand and they will get hurt by global currency wars," said Lex Van Dam, hedge-fund manager at Hampstead Capital.
On Wall Street, U.S. equity futures
The euro clung to rare gains, up 0.4 percent to trade at $1.11281
Investors widely expect the Fed to acknowledge the uncertain global outlook and stick to its promise to be patient on tightening. Yet its timetable remains for lift-off on rates by mid-year, a trajectory that presages further broad-based gains for the dollar.
Most Asian share markets firmed. Japan's Nikkei <.N225> gained 1.7 percent, while Australia's main index <.AXJO> added 0.8 percent. Other moves were mostly modest and MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> was up 0.4 percent.
Chinese markets continued their recent erratic path and the Shanghai index <.SSEC> slipped 0.8 percent.
In commodity markets, U.S. crude
(Additional reporting by John Geddie, Francesco Canepa, Jemima Kelly, Karin Strohecker; Editing by Janet Lawrence)