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    EM ASIA FX-Taiwan dollar, won lead Asia FX gains; Bernanke in focus

    * Taiwan dlr up on foreign investors, exporters; c.bank caps

    * Won up on offshore funds, exporters; intervention

    suspected

    * Baht firm on inflows, short-covering; rate cut views limit

    (Adds text, updates prices)

    By Jongwoo Cheon

    SEOUL, May 21 (Reuters) - The Taiwan dollar and the South

    Korean won led gains among emerging Asian currencies on Tuesday,

    as investors covered short positions in regional units before

    Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's congressional testimony

    and on a strong Chinese yuan.

    Offshore funds and exporters lifted the won,

    while the Taiwan dollar rose on demand from foreign financial

    institutions and corporate bids.

    The Thai baht also gained on inflows and as

    investors reduced bearish positions, although expectations of

    measures to curb the currency's strength, including a rate cut

    limited its upside.

    Still, investors stayed cautious, focusing on whether

    Bernanke suggests the Fed will soon start scaling back its

    stimulus at Wednesday's testimony, as hinted at by a Fed

    regional president last week.

    "Bernanke may or may not signal the Fed will taper its

    quantitative easing. But if expectations of the shift grows with

    more solid data in the second half, that is not positive to

    emerging Asian currencies," said Yuna Park, a currency and bond

    analyst at Dongbu Securities in Seoul.

    "In addition, regional authorities will not allow currency

    appreciation," Park added.

    Most emerging Asian currencies have eased so far this month

    on increasing speculation that the Fed may reduce its

    bond-buying programme sooner than later.

    Such a move is expected to reduce global liquidity and

    inflows to emerging Asian countries.

    Meanwhile, investors were keeping an eye on the Bank of

    Japan's two-day policy meeting which started on Tuesday.

    The central bank is expected to keep policy unchanged but

    could tinker with its bond-buying plan to curb a recent rise in

    Japanese yields.

    Analysts said the yen looked set to resume its recent

    weakening as Tokyo was committed to easier monetary policy.

    That could put pressure on other emerging Asian currencies

    as a weaker yen hurts the export competitiveness of Japan's

    rivals such as South Korea.

    Other Asian currencies have been concerned over hot money

    inflows, warning of potential measures to curb currency

    appreciation.

    TAIWAN DOLLAR

    The Taiwan dollar rose as foreign financial institutions and

    local exporters chased it, traders said.

    A stronger Chinese yuan also supported the island's

    currency.

    Investors also bought Taiwan dollar forwards with one-month

    U.S. dollar/Taiwan dollar non-deliverable forwards

    down 0.4 percent at 29.794.

    The central bank was spotted intervening to limit the Taiwan

    dollar's upside, but official U.S. dollar purchases were not

    strong, traders said.

    WON

    The won gained as demand from offshore funds and exporters

    prompted stop-loss dollar selling among local interbank

    speculators.

    But the South Korean currency found resistance at 1,110.0

    per dollar as some suspected intervention by the foreign

    exchange authorities.

    That came as the won rose nearly 1 percent to 10.8209 to the

    yen, a notch weaker than 10.8131, its strongest since

    September 2008.

    South Korea competes with Japan in key export markets, so a

    stronger won against the yen is a major concern to Seoul's

    policy makers.

    BAHT

    The baht advanced on short-covering, while real money funds

    and medium-term speculators bought it.

    The Thai currency is likely to extend gains unless Bernanke

    signals the Fed may scale back its bond-buying programme,

    traders said.

    But investors stayed cautious over the financial

    authorities' measures to curb the baht's strength, especially as

    disappointing first quarter growth spurred expectations of a

    rate cut on May 29.

    Bank of Thailand Governor Prasarn Trairatvorakul said he was

    ready to ease monetary policy if the economy was really slowing,

    but he wanted to see further details about weakness in private

    consumption suggested in first-quarter data.

    "I still think the dollar is a buy on dips. Eyes will be on

    the MPC next week, which is poised for a likely 25 bps cut,"

    said a foreign bank trader in Singapore, referring to the

    central bank's monetary policy committee.

    "A rate cut should push dollar/baht higher."

    CURRENCIES VS U.S. DOLLAR

    Change on the day at 0655 GMT

    Currency Latest bid Previous day Pct Move

    Japan yen 102.58 102.27 -0.30

    Sing dlr 1.2549 1.2542 -0.06

    Taiwan dlr 29.819 30.030 +0.71

    Korean won 1110.62 1116.80 +0.56

    Baht 29.70 29.81 +0.37

    Peso 41.15 41.19 +0.10

    Rupiah 9765.00 9755.00 -0.10

    Rupee 55.04 55.10 +0.12

    Ringgit 3.0105 3.0145 +0.13

    Yuan 6.1310 6.1389 +0.13

    Change so far in 2013

    Currency Latest bid End prev year Pct Move

    Japan yen 102.58 86.79 -15.39

    Sing dlr 1.2549 1.2219 -2.63

    Taiwan dlr 29.819 29.136 -2.29

    Korean won 1110.62 1070.60 -3.60

    Baht 29.70 30.61 +3.06

    Peso 41.15 41.05 -0.23

    Rupiah 9765.00 9630.00 -1.38

    Rupee 55.04 54.99 -0.08

    Ringgit 3.0105 3.0580 +1.58

    Yuan 6.1310 6.2303 +1.62

    (Additional reporting by Jeanny Kao in TAIPEI and IFR Markets'

    Catherine Tan in SINGAPORE; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)