* Wall Street expected to see subdued start to 2014
* China manufacturing index dips, missing forecasts
* European, Asian share markets soft, Nikkei still shut
* Dollar near highest in over five years vs yen, euro falls
* Gold bounces, talk of Chinese demand for commodities
By Marc Jones
LONDON, Jan 2 (Reuters) - World share markets made a groggy start to 2014 on Thursday, with investors using some disappointing Chinese manufacturing data as a reason to cash in on some of last year's gains.
After enjoying their best run in 15 years last year, U.S. shares were expected to edge lower when trading begins. Further gains depend on stronger growth this year, and investors were looking to U.S. jobless claims and updated December PMI figures to gauge the improvement in the world's largest economy.
Manufacturing data from China overnight and on Wednesday proved disappointing
The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300
"We think it is a temporary blip in China, but that and also perhaps the data showing the contraction in Singapore's economy earlier, maybe gave the market a slight scare," said ABN Amro economist Aline Schuiling.
Traders showed more appetite for both growth-attuned commodities and the dollar. At the same time, they trimmed their holdings of safe-haven bonds.
Gold grabbed the limelight, climbing 1.5 percent to $1,220 an ounce
The buying spilled over into silver and copper, with dealers talking of demand from Chinese traders looking to pick up commodities on the cheap. Three-month LME copper
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DOLLAR FLEXES MUSCLE
Among major currencies, the main theme remained weakness in the yen. The euro also tumbled as the dollar flexed its muscles.
The greenback hovered near a five-year high versus the Japanese currency at 105.30 yen, with the focus on the Federal Reserve's gradually scaling back its bond-buying stimulus.
The euro dropped to 143.7870 yen
"Today is the first day where fundamentals work out again ... That's why there is pressure on euro/dollar," said Ulrich Leuchtmann, the head of currency research at Commerzbank in Frankfurt.
Dealers suspect the euro currency got support in recent weeks from the repatriation of funds by European banks and from the euro zone's expanding current account surplus. But a general assumption remains that rising U.S. Treasury yields will eventually lift the dollar.
Yields on U.S. 10-year paper are up at 2 1/2-year highs of 3.03 percent. Even shorter-dated rates have been rising as improving U.S. economic data justify the Federal Reserve's decision to scale back its asset-buying.
A speech by outgoing Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke on Friday may offer some more guidance on the central bank's plans.
Prices of German Bund futures
The premium Italian and Spanish bonds offer over benchmark German Bunds also sank to its lowest since mid-2011 as their manufacturing data beat expectations in both countries.
In oil markets, U.S. crude futures
(Editing by Patrick Graham and Larry King)
((Wayne.Cole@thomsonreuters.com)(612 9373 1813)(Reuters Messaging: wayne.cole.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))
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Keywords: MARKETS GLOBAL/