At 1222 GMT, the euro was flat against the dollar at $1.3585
as jitters ahead of the jobs report kept most traders sidelined,
while the dollar index was steady at 80.546.
KBC's Wuyts said the euro's consolidation above a
9-1/2-month low of $1.3432 hit earlier this week suggested the
market had priced in most of the bad news on Greece for now,
keeping it in a range above that low and below $1.3850.
Greece sold on Thursday a 10-year syndicated bond, which was
well received by investors, although it paid a high premium. The
sale came a day after the government agreed measures aimed at
cutting the country's huge fiscal deficit.
The spread between yields on Greek government bonds and euro
zone benchmark German bunds narrowed on Friday following the
syndicated bond issue. [ID:nLDE624102]
Traders were watching for the outcome of a meeting between
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Greek Prime Minister George
Papandreou in Berlin on Friday. Merkel said on Wednesday she
would offer no financial aid to Greece. The two leaders were
scheduled to hold a news conference at 1730 GMT.
Greece's biggest public and private sector unions called for
a strike on March 11. The two unions represent about 2.5 million
workers, half of Greece's workforce.
YEN DIPS
The yen fell after sources said the BOJ was likely to debate
this month easing its ultra-loose monetary policy again as it
remained under government pressure to help pull Japan out of
deflation.
"The BOJ comments should weigh on the yen and we're looking
for dollar/yen to target 90.30 yen in the next couple of days,"
said Carl Hammer, currency strategist at SEB in Stockholm.
The euro rose 0.3 percent to 121.36 yen while the dollar was
up 0.3 percent at 89.31 yen, recovering from a 3-month low of
88.14 yen hit on trading platform EBS on Thursday.
Technical analysts said the bounce from that 88.14 low
represented a key-day reversal pattern, which had taken some of
the downside pressure off the pair.
Comments from Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao that China would
stick to an appropriately easy monetary stance and a proactive
fiscal policy also encouraged investors to buy higher-yielding
currencies against the low-yielding yen.
(Additional reporting by Neal Armstrong; Editing by Nigel
Stephenson)