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As the Middle East conflict escalates, Asian stocks fall and gold increases with yen.

As the Middle East conflict escalates, Asian stocks fall and gold increases with yen.

The stock markets in Asia dipped on Thursday, while safe havens like gold and the Japanese currency gained. Investors remained on edge as they awaited the United States' possible involvement in the Israel-Iran war.

Donald Trump, who spoke to reporters in front of the White House Thursday, said, "I might do it." I may or may not do it."

The Wall Street Journal reported that Trump told his senior aides that he had approved plans for an attack on Iran, but was waiting to give the final order until Tehran abandoned its nuclear program.

The Nikkei fell 0.8% in Japan, and the yen's strength, which lowers overseas revenue for Japan's major exporters, added to the downward pressure.

Taiwan's benchmark stock index fell 0.9% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng dropped 0.8%.

U.S. S&P500 futures were 0.4% lower on Thursday, despite the fact that most U.S. market are closed for a holiday.

Gold rose 0.3% to $3.378 an ounce.

Kyle Rodda is a senior financial market analyst at Capital.com. He said, "Market participants are still edgy.

He said: "Speculations remain rife -- probably strategically fed by the Trump Administration -- that the U.S. would intervene. This would be a material escalation, and could invite direct retaliation by Iran against the U.S. This scenario could lead to a regional conflict that would have implications for the global energy supply, and possibly economic growth.

Brent crude slipped to $76.32 a barrel but was still not far off the peak reached Friday, which was $78.50.

The yen rose 0.2%, to 144.92 dollars, and the U.S. dollar itself gained 0.1%, to $1.1472 euros, and 0.2%, to $1.3398 against sterling.

The Swiss Franc fell 0.1%, to 0.8193 dollars.

Both the Bank of England (BOE) and the Swiss National Bank (SNB) will announce their policy decisions in the afternoon. The BOE is expected to maintain interest rates at current levels, while the SNB may cut rates by up to 25 basis points.

The Federal Reserve sent mixed messages to the markets overnight. As expected, policymakers kept rates at the same level and maintained projections of two quarter-point cuts in interest rates this year.

Jerome Powell, the Fed chair, was cautious about future easing, and said at a press conference that he expected "meaningful" inflation as a result Trump's aggressive tariffs.

(source: Reuters)