(Updated at 0918 GMT)

* US June CPI data due at 1230 GMT

* Poland's Pepco drops as Q3 LFL sales fall short of expectations

* Czech central bank can cut rates further, vice-governor says

* Uganda starts buying local gold to support forex reserves

* Stocks up 1%, FX up 0.1%

July 11 (Reuters) - Risk sentiment got a lift across emerging markets on Thursday, with an index tracking equities hitting over a two-year high, while Kenyan assets were in focus after brokerage Citi downgraded the east African country's international bonds.

MSCI's index is tracking stocks in developing economies added over 1%, lifted by heavyweight China's main indexes , which settled over 1% each, after the local securities regulator announced more curbs on short-selling and pledged tighter scrutiny of computer-driven programme trading.

With equity indexes near pandemic lows and bond yields at record lows, all eyes are on the once-in-five-year Communist Party's meeting early next week as traders anticipate measures to boost growth and confidence in the world's second-largest economy.

Zin Bekkali, founder of Silk Invest, said that while the macroeconomic recovery is slow and painful, China remains an attractive investment destination, with opportunities in the bigger and globally exposed corporations and the mid-to-small cap companies.

Kenya's shilling weakened to a one-month low against the euro, while the yield on dollar bonds slipped between 4 and 9 basis points (bps).

Citi downgraded the east African nation's international bonds to "underweight", saying it expected fiscal concerns to persist and saw a "significant" risk of more credit rating downgrades after Moody's slashed the country's rating on Monday.

"The (International Monetary Fund-led) policies that have been implemented in Kenya, Nigeria and Egypt are painful, but with new reforms by the governments, it should set the tone for more sustainable economies going forward," Bekkali added.

In eastern and central Europe, Czech crown hovered near three-month lows, a day after data showed inflation within the central bank's limit. Vice-Governor Eva Zamrazilova said the regulator could ease monetary policy further but does not need to quicken its rate-cutting pace, as per a report.

Earnings were centerstage in Poland, with the main stock index flat, weighed down by a 1.3% drop in Pepco as the discount retailer reported a worse-than-expected fall in third-quarter underlying revenue.

In South Asia, India's rupee inched 0.1% lower. Indians have been allowed wider usage of foreign currency accounts at the Gujarat International Finance Tec-City, or GIFT City, boosting business prospects for a finance hub pushed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Elsewhere, Uganda's shilling inched up 0.1%. The domestic central bank has begun buying locally produced gold to bolster its depleted foreign reserves and tackle emerging challenges in international financial markets.

Attention will also be on a key U.S. inflation report due later in the day, along with central bank decisions out of Serbia, Korea and Malaysia.

(Reporting by Johann M Cherian in Bengaluru; Editing by Tasim Zahid)