* Yen hits 11-month high vs Australian dollar
* China PMI, fall on Wall St adds to risk-off mood
* U.S. ISM manufacturing , Markit's Eurozone PMI in focus
By Ian Chua and Tomo Uetake
SYDNEY/ TOKYO, Feb 2 (Reuters) - The yen briefly touched a two-week high versus the dollar on Monday, while commodity currencies were fragile as worries about the health of the Chinese economy added to unease following a selloff on Wall Street.
The dollar slid to a two-week low of 116.64 yen in early trade, its lowest since Jan. 16, down from around 117.52 late in New York on Friday.
Dollar buying by Japanese importers helped the exchange rate back to 117.74 yen, but analysts say the dollar looks vulnerable after data showed on Friday the U.S. economy slowed in the fourth quarter, driving Treasury yields to new lows.
"Now that U.S. GDP growth has come lower than expected, markets are paying more attention to other U.S. data, to be released in the coming days," said Kengo Suzuki, chief forex strategist at Mizuho Securities.
Among key numbers, U.S. ISM non-manufacturing data will be out on Monday and Friday's non-farm payrolls report is due on Friday.
"There is a broad consensus that the U.S. economy is the only bright spot for global growth. If headline numbers are weaker than expected, markets tend to react more," said Minori Uchida, head of Tokyo Global Market Research at the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ.
The yen was also helped by investor's truning more risk averse after an official survey on Sunday showed activity in China's factory sector unexpectedly shrank for the first time in nearly 2-1/2 years in January.
A separate survey, the HSBC/Markit Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI), showed on Monday that activity in China's factory sector shrank for a second month in January, helping to cap commodity currencies.
The euro also reached a one-week trough of 132.00 yen before bouncing back to 133.16, while the Australian dollar plumbed an 11-month low of 90.25 yen before steadying around 91.50.
"The weaker China PMI is likely to reinforce the market's current negative bias towards commodity currencies and those linked closely to the China growth story," said Jonathan Cavenagh, currency strategist at Westpac.
A recent surprise cut in rates by the Bank of Canada and a dovish turn by New Zealand's central bank, were also keeping buyers at bay.
Even an 8-percent surge in oil prices on Friday failed to give much lift to the loonie, which continued to hover near a six-year trough of C$1.2800 per U.S. dollar.
Analysts suspect Australia's central bank will be next to jump on the dovish bandwagon. The Reserve Bank of Australia board meets on Tuesday and many suspect it will either lower the cash rate by a quarter point to 2.25 percent or lay the groundwork for a reduction in coming months.