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Trump's actions trigger flight from US Dollar

Dollar?was near multi-year lows Wednesday after investors aggressively sold it when?U.S. Donald Trump appeared to dismiss its recent decline while Wall Street?marched to new record highs.

The plunge in the dollar has pushed the euro above $1.20, the Australian dollar to a record high of 70 cents, and the gold and commodities prices that are measured in dollars have risen sharply.

The ailing yen accelerated away from recent lows before trading settled in the morning hours of the Asia session.

When asked by a reporter if the dollar had dropped too much recently, Trump replied "Dollar is doing great."

Before Trump's comment, the dollar was at its lowest point in three days since last April, when the tariff blitz began. Markets were also unnerved by Trump’s Greenland diplomacy, as well as signals that the U.S. would be willing to assist Japan in boosting the yen.

Steve Englander is the head of Standard Chartered's global G10 currency research in New York.

"Often, officials will push back on sudden currency movements but when the president expresses his indifference to the move or even endorses it, this encourages USD sellers.

A source said that the New York Federal Reserve had checked the dollar rate against the Japanese yen last week. The market interpreted this as an indication that the U.S. authorities would not mind if Japan pushed the yen up, and might even assist.

The dollar has already fallen more than 9% since 2017, the most significant drop since 2017. This is due to Trump's 'attacks' on the Federal Reserve, his spending and his foreign policy.

The weaker dollar has helped gold reach a new record of $5.188.95 per ounce over night and U.S. Crude to break through the 200-day moving averge for the first six months at $62.54 per barrel.

Bitcoin is still stuck below $90,000. Tokyo's benchmark 10-year treasury yields increased a little to 4.237%.

Wall Street saw health insurers plummet as the Trump Administration proposed a smaller increase?in government payments to insurers than expected by investors.

In Asia, futures rose by 0.1% and the S&P 500 gained 0.4%.

Around regional markets, Australian shares posted small gains. South Korea's KOSPI rose 1.7% to an all-time high, and Japan's Nikkei fell 0.7%. The Nikkei tends to move in the opposite direction to the yen. (Reporting and editing by Shri Navaratnam.)

(source: Reuters)