* Commodities broadly retreat, equities slip
* China stocks fall on rate increase talk
* IEA trims 2011 oil demand growth estimate, raises 2010
(Adds details, quote)
By Alex Lawler
LONDON, Nov 12 (Reuters) - Oil fell more than 2 percent to below $86 a barrel on Friday, retreating from a 25-month high reached in the previous session, as concern about Irish debt spurred a broad retreat from riskier assets.
Attention in the oil market refocused on risk aversion and macroeconomic concerns at the end of a week when prices were sent higher by oil's fundamentals -- Chinese demand at a record and U.S. inventories plunging.
U.S. crude <CLc1> was down $2.05 a barrel at $85.76 as of 1025 GMT, after touching an intra-day peak of $88.63 on Thursday, the highest since October 2008. ICE Brent <LCOc1> slid $1.63 to $87.18.
"This price slump can be explained by a general weakness of commodity prices triggered by the stronger U.S. dollar and rumours of an imminent interest rate hike in China," said Carsten Fritsch, analyst at Commerzbank.
"Consequently, we are likely to be seeing profit taking by short-term oriented investors primarily."
The euro fell broadly on Friday, hitting a two-month low versus the Japanese yen and a six-week low versus the dollar on worries over Ireland's public finances and as positions in riskier assets were pared back.
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For a timeline on the eurozone crisis:
http://link.reuters.com/kar27p
Euro zone struggles with debt graphic:
http://r.reuters.com/hyb65p
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European equities lost ground in early trade, gold fell and copper declined. Asian stocks were broadly lower, led by a 5 percent drop in the Shanghai composite index <
> on talk of interest rate increases.The International Energy Agency, an adviser to 28 industrialised countries, on Friday predicted a slowdown in the rate of growth in global oil demand next year, while raising its forecast for 2010. [
]Concerns about Ireland overshadowed a Group of 20 leaders' summit in Seoul, where a breakthrough on resolving global economic imbalances amid incongruent policies looked unattainable. [
]Oil had rallied for most of the past two weeks, partly on a plan by the U.S. Federal Reserve to buy $600 billion in Treasury bonds to help speed economic growth. (Additional reporting by Alejandro Barbajosa; Editing by William Hardy)