* Euro dips through $1.3200 to lowest in 2 months
* Market looking beyond Ireland package to Portugal
By Charlotte Cooper
TOKYO, Nov 29 (Reuters) - The euro fell to its lowest in two months against the dollar on Monday as the market looked past a rescue package for Ireland to other euro zone economies and a euro zone crisis resolution mechanism.
EU finance ministers endorsed an 85 billion-euro ($115 billion) loan package to help Dublin cover bad bank debts and bridge a huge budget deficit, and approved outlines of a permanent crisis-resolution system which could make private bond holders share the burden of restructuring sovereign debt bought after 2013.
The euro initially rose in early Asian trade, after the weekend rescue package, but one trader said that move appeared to come from buying by one party, there was no follow-through and it quickly faded.
A key point for investors is whether the EU has done enough to stem fears from spilling over to other euro zone members such as Portugal, a problem not resolved after Greece was bailed out earlier this year.
"There was an end of uncertainty at least about the timing and the size of the (Irish) bailout and people bought the euro but it was temporary," said Masafumi Yamamoto, chief FX strategist Japan at Barclays Capital in Tokyo.
"The focus is moving on to Spain and Portugal."
The euro fell as far as $1.3186 before pulling back to $1.3195. It fell through its 100-day moving average on Friday, a bearish signal, and the next target is its 200-day moving average currently at $1.3131.
Against the yen, the euro stood at 111.00 yen, from 111.34 yen late on Friday.
"There's absolutely no indication that the agreed package for Ireland is going to soothe those concerns stemming from the Iberian peninsula," said Philip Shaw, chief economist at Investec.
Ireland said the emergency loans would run for an average of 7.5 years, and EU Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said the final interest rate would likely be about 6 percent, slightly lower than what some had feared.
The dollar was up at its highest levels in two months against a basket of major currencies, at 80.598, having touched 80.628.
It briefly ticked to a two-month high of 84.20 yen, keeping firm after a gain on Friday, but quickly retreated to 84.11 yen.
It has breached its 100-day moving average at 84.09 yen but needs a clean break there to push on to the next resistance level at around 84.40 yen, the highs of late September, and psychological resistance up at 85.00.
The Australian dollar slipped to its lowest since early October, dropping as far as $0.9600.
Investors are keeping a close eye on developments in the Korean Peninsular, where China has called for emergency talks to resolve the crisis between North and South Korea. (Additional reporting by Ian Chua in Sydney and Reuters FX analysts Krishna Kumar in Sydney and Rick Lloyd in Singapore; Editing by Joseph Radford)