Efforts by G20 leaders convinced investors that policy makers were united enough to keep a risk taking rally alive on Friday, pushing up Asian equities for a fourth day and knocking the yen to a six-month low against the Australian dollar.

The perception of global policy coordination added to a growing optimism based on sprouts of economic recovery around the world in the last month. For example, a gauge of Chinese manufacturing in March released on Thursday reflected expansion for the first time since September 2008.

Though caution reigned ahead of the latest U.S. payrolls figure due later on Friday, views on the medium-term outlook improved markedly after the Group of 20 pledged $1.1 trillion in additional funds for the International Monetary Fund and to support global trade finance.

We expected a lot of discord between the U.S. and UK and France and Germany with China poking its nose in as well but they seem to come out of the event as one connected group, seemingly on the same page, said Dwyfor Evans, currency strategist with State Street Global Markets in Hong Kong.

It implies that there is policy coordination and not policy discord, he said.

Institutional investors have been selling U.S. dollars and yen and buying emerging market and commodity-related currencies, Evans said, citing State Street's capital flows data.

Global stock markets have been rising at a torrid pace for nearly a month now, particularly in Asia, and some dealers were talking about the need to pause and lock in some of the gains. Indeed, U.S. stock market futures were already pointing to a slightly lower open later in the day.

Japan's Nikkei share average rose 0.2 percent, led for a third day by automaker stocks. Shares of Toyota Motor Corp <7203.T> rose 6.7 percent following more evidence overnight the global car market collapse could be nearing an end.

Car sales in Germany, Europe's largest market, surged 40 percent in March, mainly due to government incentives to encourage drivers to trade old cars for more fuel-efficient models.

The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks outside Japan edged up 0.1 percent and stood more than 20 percent higher since late February.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng index <.HSI> was up slightly near a three-month high, after a 7 percent surge on Thursday.

Rebounding commodity prices fed into a 3 percent pop in shares of Australian miners BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto . The benchmark S&P/ASK 200 index <.AXJO> climbed 1.3 percent.

THE GRAND 20

The yen took an early beating against higher yielding currencies such as the Australian and New Zealand dollars but then fought back some, ahead of the March U.S. employment data.

The euro was trading relatively unchanged against the yen at 133.98 yen after a choppy morning. The dollar was up a touch at 99.65 yen after earlier poking above the psychologically important 100 yen level since early November 2008.

Debate was ensuing among market participants about exactly where the money to fund the G20's goals was going to come from, but most analysts agreed that the policy response was more than they had expected.

Standard Charted strategists labeled their morning note The Grand 20, saying emerging market and high-yielding currencies will be supported because of actions to beef up the IMF.

However, the initial market euphoria may yet prove to be exaggerated given that the weak economic outlook will persist for some time - today's U.S. payrolls numbers and U.S. corporate earnings next week could provide a nasty reminder, they said.

The benchmark 10-year Japanese government bond yield rose to a 3-1/2-month high on Friday, as the Nikkei advanced.

JGB futures also touched their lowest in nearly five months.

Globally, emerging market bond returns rose 0.78 percent on Thursday, according to JPMorgan's EMBI-plus performance index. The index has gained 4 percent since the end of February.