* European stock markets up around 2 percent
* G20 finance leaders try to calm markets, message mixed
* Risk sentiment improves with oil, better U.S. data
* Sterling steadies after Brexit sell-off
By Patrick Graham
LONDON, Feb 26 (Reuters) - Stock markets gained for the third day in five on Friday as G20 policymakers meeting in Shanghai sought common ground on how to reboot a struggling global economy in the face of renewed financial and political risks.
Another day of steadier oil and currency prices LCOc1 supported the brighter mood after a week marked chiefly by the woes of Britain's pound at the start of a campaign over whether to leave the European Union in a referendum in June.
Setting the tone for the Shanghai meeting of the Group of 20, China's central bank chief, Zhou Xiaochuan, said Beijing still had the room and tools to support the world's second largest economy. .SSEC and other Asian stock markets .N225 made guarded gains and Europe's major markets were all up by around 2 percent. The yuan currency, battered in January by speculation Beijing would have to devalue sharply, was roughly steady.
Sterling gained around half a percent against the euro and dollar. GBP=D4 EURGBP=D4
"The focus is definitely on the G20 meeting, which has the ability to support the market, particularly the comments from Zhou... that there is no basis for further yuan depreciation," said the head of emerging market research at Credit Agricole (PA:CAGR), Sebastien Barbe.
"It is key for them to convince the market that they are not going to enter into a currency war."
With the world economy facing its most serious crisis of confidence since the global financial turmoil of 2008-9, economists and officials have raised the prospect of governments pledging together to spend more to bolster growth.
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, however, was quick to declare that the scope for monetary and fiscal policy was exhausted globally and called for more structural reform. Italian central bank governor Ignazio Visco said markets should not expect concrete action from the meeting.
"We'll get supportive statements on the growth outlook remaining decent and ... we'll hear that policy options are still available if growth were to take a much more significant dip downwards," said Alvin Tan, a currency strategist with French bank Societe Generale (PA:SOGN) in London.
"But despite the likely positive rhetoric, it's going to be rhetoric. We just don't see any substantive co-ordinated measures coming out of the G20."
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS gained just over 1 percent. South Korea .KS11 was roughly flat, while Japan's Nikkei .N225 gained just 0.3 percent.
Wall Street's S&P 500 scored its highest close since early January on Thursday after oil staged a turnaround on speculation a March meeting of major producers might stabilise prices.
U.S. crude CLc1 rose 1.6 percent to $33.04 a barrel. Brent LCOc1 was 16 cents lower at $35.13.
On the British question, UK finance minister George Osborne said that the pound's 3 percent fall in three days at the start of this week was a warning that the "Brexit" debate was "not some political parlour game".
The pound has recovered some ground since hitting 7-year lows against the dollar on Wednesday and is now down 2.7 percent on the week, its worst performance since 2010.