By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - China's interest rate cut kept shares worldwide near record highs on Monday, though euro zone bourses, bonds and the euro were pegged back by a lack of progress in resolving Greece?s financing woes.
China's third rate cut in six months on Sunday saw Asian markets get the week off to a solid start, but Europe was cautious as euro zone finance ministers prepared to meet in Brussels to try to find a way to keep Greece afloat.
Athens has to repay 750 million euro to the International Monetary Fund on Tuesday. France's Finance Minister Michel Sapin said Monday's meeting would be not be "decisive", though he had no doubt a deal would come eventually.
The jitters however meant most of the euro zone's stock markets <0#.INDEXE> and its bonds started lower, though outperformance by Britain's FTSE <.FTSE> after Friday's post-election jump kept the FTSEurofirst 300 <.FTEU3> about level.
The euro bore the brunt of the angst, falling half a percent to $1.1157
"I get the feeling in the market that there are increasingly more people who are positioning for a Grexit," Credit Agricole's European head of FX strategy, Adam Myers, said.
"More and more people seem to be taking a pessimistic view. That wasn't there even a month ago."
Two-year Greek yields edged up 35 basis points to 20.86 percent and Greek stocks <.ATG>, which rallied sharply last week, were down 2.3 percent.
The nervousness also weighed on Italian
BULLS IN THE CHINA SHOP
A 3-percent surge in Chinese stocks following the rate cut had helped MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> climb 0.4 percent, with Japan's Nikkei <.N225> also up 1.3 percent.
There had been an element of followthrough from the 1 percent gain on Wall Street on Friday after a bounce back in jobs U.S. numbers had lifted sentiment.
That data had also given the dollar renewed energy. It was 0.3 percent higher against other top currencies <.DXY> and up for a third straight session in European trading.
The payrolls figures kept alive the possibility of the Federal Reserve raising U.S. interest rates for the first time in almost a decade as soon as September, although futures markets are still leaning towards December.
The yield on the benchmark 10-year note
In addition to Greece's ongoing debt woes, the euro was under pressure after German Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives were badly beaten in a regional election.
The dollar's widespread strength also meant the pound
Among commodities, oil got off to a lackluster start, with Brent
Gold
(Additional reporting by Jemima Kelly in London, Lisa Twaronite in Tokyo; Editing by Louise Ireland)