* U.S. non-farm payrolls worse than expected
* But unemployment rate falls
* Aussie gains after mining tax bill diluted
(Recasts, adds details, updates prices)
By Nick Olivari
NEW YORK, July 2 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar fell against the euro on Friday, extending the previous day's steep losses on concerns over the U.S. economic recovery after worse-than-expected U.S. jobs data.
The report showed a larger-than-expected drop in U.S. June nonfarm payrolls to 125,000, due to layoffs of temporary government workers, even as the unemployment rate unexpectedly fell to 9.5 percent. For more details, click [ID:nOAT004655]
The euro gained against the dollar as investors looked past economic problems in the euro zone and instead focused on the possibility of a stalled economic recovery in the U.S.
"What this does is, it reinforces the market's view that the U.S. recovery is losing steam," said Greg Salvaggio, vice president of trading, Tempus Consulting in Washington. "There's a growing concern in the market place right now that previously the U.S. was thought to be the economy which was going to drive forward regardless of events happening elsewhere in the world. Now there are some very, very serious concerns that the U.S. recovery is beginning to stumble."
Friday's U.S. jobs report follows weak housing and manufacturing data on Thursday and weak consumer confidence data earlier in the week.
In early New York trade, the euro last traded at $1.2592
"We are at a phase at the moment when the dollar reacts negatively to poor U.S. data, which we have quite a lot recently," said Tom Levinson, currency strategist at ING in London.
The euro was already bolstered by easing concerns about euro zone liquidity problems after a lower take-up of European Central Bank funding and successful bond auctions on Thursday.
The euro surged more than 2.0 percent on Thursday in its biggest one-day advance since mid-March last year. However, some analysts remained cautious on the single currency ahead of European bank stress test results and a Greek T-bill issue due later this month.
Options with a strike price at $1.2500 are set to expire later in the day on Friday.
MINING TAX
The Australian dollar
"The Australian dollar was buoyed by a mining tax deal reached in that country," said TJ Marta, chief market strategist at Marta on the Markets.
The greenback hit a seven-month low against the yen on
Thursday
One-month implied volatility for dollar/yen pulled back to
around 12.55
The dollar hit a 14-year low against the yen last November. (Additional reporting by Wanfeng Zhou) (Reporting by Nick Olivari)