Asian stock markets and the euro rose on Thursday as European leaders announced a deal to tackle the region's crippling sovereign debt woes.
After 10 hours of painstaking talks in Brussels, banks holding some of Greece's mountain of debt agreed to take a 50 percent "haircut" on their holdings, breaking a deadlock many hope will help end the two-year-old crisis.
The summit also established a fresh Greek bailout and a deal that will force lenders to increase their defenses against losses on the debt write-down, while more than doubling a rescue fund aimed at protecting other Eurozone economies.
Tokyo jumped 2.04 percent, or 178.07 points, to 8,926.54, Seoul added 1.46 percent, or 27.73 points, to 1,922.04, and Sydney closed 2.49 percent, or 105.7 points, stronger at 4,348.2.
Hong Kong rallied 3.26 percent, or 622.16 points, to 19,688.70, while Shanghai ended 0.34 percent, or 8.13 points, up at 2,435.61.
Sydney was closed for four hours soon after opening due to a technical glitch.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy said after the talks: "I think the result will be welcomed with relief by the entire world that was waiting for strong decisions from the euro zone. I believe we have those decisions."
The agreement by holders of Greek bonds to accept a 50 percent loss on their investment -- more than double the 21 percent they agreed to at a summit in July -- will slash 100 billion Euros ($140 billion) from the 350 billion Euros that Greece owes.
Lenders agreed to the move after German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Sarkozy broke off from long-running talks to speak directly to the head of the banking lobby.
There were fears that a deal would not be struck as banks held out for a 40 percent loss but they eventually agreed to the bigger write-down.
Convincing banks to erase billions in Greek debt is a key part of a grand deal leaders had pledged to deliver, along with the bank recapitalization and beefed-up rescue fund.
The lenders had earlier agreed to a recapitalization to protect themselves against a Greek writedown.
The declaration on recapitalization, which came after a meeting of all 27 European Union members, lacked any details but sources said it would amount to 108 billion Euros.
That had been contingent only on a full package being agreed to protect the euro.
Soon after the talks wrapped up, Sarkozy announced that the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) rescue fund would be increased to one trillion Euros from the 440 billion agreed to in July.
The EFSF, the main weapon against the crisis, has already been used to help Portugal and Ireland, and would be tapped in a new Greek rescue. However, it would be too small for bigger endangered economies, such as Italy and Spain.
Global powers, from the United States to Japan and China, had been pressing European leaders to come up with a lasting solution to the debt crisis before a G20 summit in France on November 3 and 4.
The crisis has sent markets spinning amid fears that it could spill over on to the global economy and lead to another financial meltdown.
In Tokyo, Olympus shares surged more than 22 percent, one day after the camera maker's under-pressure chairman and president resigned over a fee payments scandal.
The firm had lost more than 50 percent of its value since the sacking earlier this month of its British chief executive after he raised doubts over advisory fees tied to a series of buyouts.
On currency markets, the euro was higher, jumping to $1.4020 in European trade against $1.3908 late Wednesday in New York, while it rose to 106.42 yen from 105.98.
The dollar was at 75.89 yen, compared with 76.21 yen, after hitting a fresh post-World War II low of 75.71 yen in New York on Wednesday.
New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in December, gained $1.67 to $91.87 per barrel.
Brent North Sea crude for December delivery added $1.23 to $110.14.
By 0810 GMT, gold was up at $1,717.35 an ounce, against $1,713.50 late Wednesday.
In other markets:
-- Taipei rose 0.39 percent, or 29.39 points, to 7,565.21.
Hon Hai rose 0.62 percent to Tw$80.9 while HTC was 0.58 percent higher at Tw$691.0.
-- Manila closed 1.01 percent, or 42.74 points, higher at 4,267.50.
Philippine Long Distance Telephone added 2.5 percent to 2,388 pesos while Metropolitan Bank and Trust rose 1.7 percent to 69.05 pesos.
-- Wellington closed 0.20 percent, or 6.50 points, higher at 3,303.47.
Fletcher Building rose 2.5 percent to NZ$6.61 and NZ Oil & Gas surged 7.7 percent to NZ$0.70.
-- Mumbai was closed for a public holiday.
-- Dow Jones Newswires contributed to this story --
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