By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - The dollar limped towards its worst week since last July on Friday and world stocks headed for their first weekly fall in five, as storms surrounding Donald Trump's U.S. presidency and Latin America's biggest economy, Brazil, began to calm.
It has been the most eventful week of the year so far for investors, with leading share markets scaling record highs and then plunging in one of the sharpest cross-asset routs in years.
Wall Street was expected to nudge higher when it reopens after a tentative recovery on Thursday. Europe and Tokyo in Asia also eked out gains, while demand for safe-haven bonds had also eased.
Jitters persisted in some areas, though. The dollar sagged to its lowest level since Trump's U.S election victory in November and safe-haven gold headed higher on the way to its best week since April.
"The frustrating element is that we are now at the mercy of equity markets," said National Australia Bank's global head of FX strategy, Nick Parsons.
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"We can be pretty confident that 10 points on or off of the S&P 500 is a big figure on or off of dollar/yen," he added, saying the only thing likely to break the link would be a confident-sounding Federal Reserve at its next meeting.
This week's roller-coaster was triggered by political uproar over Trump's firing of FBI director James Comey and allegations he pressed Comey to stop investigating his former national security chief and his campaign's alleged ties with Russia.
Overlaying that is concern that the resultant political damage could hamper Trump's chances of getting his promised fiscal stimulus -- which has spurred markets higher since November -- through Congress.
The gradual return of risk appetite on Friday also saw investors switch from highly rated U.S. Treasuries and European government bonds into higher-yielding Italian and Portuguese debt.
Like the dollar, the U.S. yield curve has slumped back to levels not seen since Trump's election, and the probability given by markets of the Fed raising rates next month has tumbled to below 60 percent from over 90 percent last week.
"Everything has turned upside down -- European political risks have faded, the economy is looking strong, while in the U.S. everybody is worried," said DZ Bank strategist Daniel Lenz.
The U.S. currency has also suffered from a resurgent euro, which has gained more than 2 percent this week - on track for its best performance since June - and rose 0.7 percent on Friday to hit a six-month high of $1.11745.
TEMER TURMOIL
It hasn't only been about Trump though. Emerging markets have also been grappling with an unfolding corruption scandal in Brazil that threatens to engulf its president, Michel Temer.
Brazilian markets cratered on Thursday, with stocks down nearly 9 percent and the real 8 percent -- the currency's biggest fall since the 1999 devaluation and crisis, although it looked steadier ahead of the start of local trading.
"For Brazil this is a very serious thing," said Alejo Czerwonko, director of emerging markets investment strategy at UBS. "But in the medium term, the next 3-6 months, this is not necessarily a threat to EM more broadly."
MSCI's main emerging markets index clawed back some ground on Friday but it remained on track for its worst week of the year so far.
In commodities, the story was about supply and demand. Oil was enjoying a third straight session of gains and set for a 4 percent weekly rise following signals that big producer countries may be closing in on a deal to extend output curbs.
U.S. crude futures hit a three-week high, and were last trading up 0.8 percent to $49.76 a barrel. Global benchmark Brent was up a similar amount too at $52.89, near a four-week high.
The U.S. political uncertainty also put a shine on gold. It climbed to $1,248.62 an ounce and was set for a weekly gain of 1.6 percent, which would be its best since April.
"People are still wary of geopolitical risks and not selling the safe-haven asset yet," said Brian Lan, managing director at gold dealer GoldSilver Central in Singapore.
(Additional reporting by Sujata Rao in London; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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