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* Euro flat at $1.06 after ECB moves spark 2 cent loss
* Dollar bulls still point to attack on parity
* Steepening of euro zone yield curve seen to weigh on euro
* Yen dips half a percent against euro, dollar
By Patrick Graham
LONDON, Dec 9 (Reuters) - The euro recovered a foothold on Friday after an extension of the European Central Bank's programme of money-printing till the end of next year drove its biggest daily loss against the dollar since Britain's vote to leave the European Union in June.
While the bank said it would reduce the monthly value of purchases, they will continue longer than the market expected and were accompanied by a handful of other measures judged as negative for the single currency going forward.
But despite the more than 2-cent fall that resulted on Thursday, at $1.0612 EUR= the euro is still a cent above November's lows - reflecting doubts over the broader dollar rally which has dominated the past quarter.
A rise in Federal Reserve interest rates next week seems fully priced in to markets, and it may take a more bullish signal on further rises next year from Fed chair Janet Yellen to provoke more gains.
"Markets have settled down after yesterday's big moves," said Adam Cole, head of global FX strategy with RBC Capital Markets in London.
There are strong arguments for the dollar to keep rising into next year. U.S. interest rates are already far higher than the equivalents in Japan and Europe and the broader economic and policy outlook still also points in opposite directions.
ECB President Mario Draghi emphasised strongly the doubts that remain over any pickup in European inflation and growth and the bank reduced its forecast for inflation in 2018 and said it would still be below its 2 percent target a year later.
"A breach of parity (for the dollar) remains our call," said Derek Halpenny, European head of global market research at Japan's MUFG in London.
"There were a number of key elements of yesterday's announcement that make this a more dovish event than expected (and) that we believe reinforces the downside risks for the euro against the dollar."
As well as the inflation outlook, he and a number of analysts pointed to changes in the ECB's asset-buying rules which they said should put downward pressure on euro zone short-term interest rates, further weakening the currency's appeal.
Helped by higher U.S. yields overnight, the dollar index was marginally higher on the day at 101.12 .DXY after a 1 percent rise on Thursday. For the week it was on track to gain just 0.3 percent.
Against the yen the greenback was up 0.4 percent at 114.49 yen JPY= , within sight of last week's 10-month high of 114.830. (Editing by Toby Chopra)