(Corrects to remove reference to Nikkei as market closed for holiday)
* Stocks rise, with MSCI world index up 0.5 pct
* Dollar gains against major currencies
* Oil, gold and govt bonds fall (For a FACTBOX on major market losses and gains in 2008, click on [ID:nLV492428])
By Dominic Lau
LONDON, Jan 2 (Reuters) - World stocks rose on the first trading day of the year after a dismal 2008, while the dollar gained. Crude oil and metal prices fell, as did government bonds.
Global stocks as measured by the MSCI world index <.MIWD00000PUS> were up 0.5 percent, with the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 <.FTEU3> gaining 1.1 percent.
"The unprecedented events of 2008, and continuing fallout into 2009 will see a number of false dawns and continuing volatility throughout the coming year," said a trader at derivatives broker Blue Index in London.
Data still painted a bleak picture for the global economy after factories in China, India and Russia slashed output and jobs at a record pace in December.
Manufacturing activity in the euro zone also sank to a record survey low last month, below an already dire flash reading and the outlook remains grim as new orders also sagged to new lows.
The downturn in activity was accompanied by falling inflationary pressures, clearing the way for the European Central Bank to cut interest rates again when it meets later this month, as it is expected to do.
"The good news about this year is that people have been so pessimistic at the beginning of this year as opposed to being so optimistic at the beginning of last year, they may have overdone the pessimism," said Justin Urquhart Stewart, London-based investment director at Seven Investment Management.
"And that's quite sensible because there are some huge challenges to face. The thing people should remember is that equity markets generally recover in a recession but it's like trying to fight your way through the dust after the explosion's gone off."
The euro
As global demand weakened, oil prices
Gold
Prices in relatively risk-free government bonds also
slipped. Yields in benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasuries
Euro zone government bonds had a stellar year in 2008 with
two-year yields