Oil fell for a third day before major suppliers meet in Doha to discuss an output freeze, sending bonds higher and leaving European stocks little changed, with investors wary of potential disappointment from the talks. U.S. crude trimmed its second weekly advance and shares in Europe halted a five-day advance. German bonds pared their first weekly drop in more than a month. South Korea’s won led gains in Asian currencies as a flood of Chinese data added to evidence that the world’s second-largest economy is stabilizing. After a week in which China calmed global markets with signs that stimulus policies were helping the economy recover, fresh risks are lining up for the weekend. Failure to reach an agreement in Doha risks de-stabilizing oil prices that have rebounded amid prospects for an easing in a global surplus. In Brazil, an impeachment vote against President Dilma Rousseff is set to go […]