Asian shares and the euro steadied yesterday on hopes European leaders would agree on a definitive plan to solve the Eurozone\'s debt crisis at a crucial summit this week, with sentiment also getting a lift from Italy unveiling austerity steps. European stock markets were also expected to open higher, building on last week\'s biggest weekly gain since late 2008. But investors were wary of pushing markets much higher at the start of an eventful week, which also sees the European Central Bank\'s last monetary policy meeting for the year on Thursday, with an expectation for a rate cut. \"The market will be playing a tug-of-war this week, with any improvement in sentiment from a political progress in Europe being countered by year-end position-squaring,\" said Tetsuro Ii, chief executive officer of Commons Asset Management in Tokyo. He said financial institutions pressured to bolster their core capital would keep selling liquid assets including stocks and bonds, especially after such a sharp rally as last week\'s. MSCI\'s broadest index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan rose as much as 0.3 per cent before paring most gains to stand flat. The index ended last week with its first weekly rise in a month, buoyed by joint global central bank liquidity action. Japan\'s Nikkei gained 0.6 per cent and outperformed most other Asian peers on an improved technical outlook, topping its 25-day moving average for the past three sessions. Financial spread betters predicted Britain\'s FTSE 100 to open as much as 0.2 per cent higher, Germany\'s DAX to gain as much as 0.3 per cent and France\'s CAC-40 to rise as much as 0.4 per cent. IMF in focus US stock index futures also rose, adding to their biggest weekly rally since March 2009 last week after data showing a drop in the US unemployment rate to a 2-1/2-year low reinforced views the economy remained on a recovery path. Shanghai shares were down 0.7 per cent, weighed by the latest data pointing to a cooling Chinese economy, with the HSBC Purchasing Managers\' Index for China\'s services sector falling to 52.5 from 54.1 in November for its slowest rate of growth in three months. Later yesterday, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel meet to outline joint proposals for more coercive budget discipline in the Eurozone, which they want all 27 EU leaders to approve at Friday\'s summit. The focus at the summit will be squarely on new rules to tighten fiscal integration. An agreement could pave the way for an accelerated implementation of the Eurozone\'s rescue scheme to help ensure debt-ridden countries have a vehicle to tap for funds while encouraging bondholders to buy Eeurozone bonds. US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner kicks off his European visit today in Germany to meet ECB President Mario Draghi and Germany officials. He will join EU leaders later in the week. Ii at Commons Asset Management said Geithner\'s visit raised hopes of further discussion over the International Monetary Fund\'s involvement in the Eurozone debt crisis, as Europe seeks to boost the IMF\'s resources to enable it to provide a credible backstop should struggling Eurozone borrowers need an emergency loan programme. In a further sign Europe is making progress, four sources have told Reuters Germany is prepared to soften language in the Eurozone\'s permanent bailout mechanism compelling bondholders to accept losses in exchange for much stricter budget rules. Soaring costs Italy, one of the most severely debt-stricken Eurozone countries which has faced soaring borrowing costs, unveiled a €30-billion (Dh147 billion) package of austerity measures on Sunday, raising taxes and increasing the pension age. The euro climbed as high as $1.3435 on Italy\'s news, but was last at $1.3410, up marginally from late in New York. The euro may find some support due to the potential for short-covering, a trader for a Japan-ese bank said, as latest US CFTC data showed speculators increased their net short position.