* Australia stocks rise, buoyed by metals, oil, Nufarm
* Other Asian shares trail; China's CNR makes weak debut
* Copper prices rise, oil holds just below 5-week high
* Dollar firm as investors weigh prospects for 2010
By Charlotte Cooper
TOKYO, Dec 29 (Reuters) - Australian shares rose on Tuesday, helped by gains in oil and metals and by merger activity, but stock markets elsewhere in Asia lagged as year-end activity dwindled, and the dollar's rally ran out of steam.
Oil
In Tokyo, the Nikkei average <.N225> was flat after briefly touching a four-month high, while the MSCI index for Asia excluding Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> edged up 0.2 percent but was still some way off matching November's 2009 high.
Shares in Australia outperformed, rising 1.2 percent
<.AXJO> to a nine-week peak as farm chemicals group Nufarm
BHP Billiton Ltd
"There were some gains in gold and oil prices and so that's giving a little bit of momentum to the market," said Juliana Roadley, a market analyst at Commonwealth Securities in Sydney.
Spot gold
Copper prices
The gains came after a fall in exchange stocks and threats to supply in Chile. [ID:nN28156122] [ID:nN28167312]
In Japan, shares of exporters that had led recent gains ran out of steam, while trading houses such as Mitsui & Co <8031.T> climbed as commodity prices rose.
"Caution will also be necessary as we head into the new year. It's hard to think the market will just keep rising as there's still a chance it could very well test another trough," said Yutaka Miura, a senior technical analyst at Mizuho Securities.
Twenty years ago, around the peak of Japan's asset price bubble, the Nikkei marked a record high of 38,915.87, nearly four times the current level. The benchmark hit a 26-year closing low last March but has clawed back about 50 percent since then.
Japan Airlines Corp <9205.T> plunged more than 9 percent after sources said a state-backed turnaround fund may seek to put the struggling airline through bankruptcy court as part of restructuring efforts. [ID:nTOE5BR00D]
Shanghai shares <.SSEC> were flat. Shares in Chinese train maker CNR Corp <601299.SS>, which raised $2 billion this month in China's fourth-largest initial public share offering this year, rose 3 percent in a weaker-than-expected debut. [ID:nTOE5BR075]
"The weak debut is actually good for the market, as it sends a warning for future IPOs, forcing companies to think twice before they set sky-high IPO prices," said Chen Huiqin, a senior stock analyst at Huatai Securities in Nanjing.
The dollar held firm at 91.72 yen
Traders said upward pressure on long-term U.S. Treasury
yields was providing it with support, after the benchmark
10-year note