Dollar and other safe havens rise as Israel strikes Iran

Synopsis
Currency markets saw a sudden shift as Israel initiated strikes on Iran. The US dollar, Japanese yen, and Swiss franc strengthened. Crude prices rose sharply due to potential supply disruptions. Gold prices also surged to their highest level since early May. Risk-sensitive Asian currencies weakened following the news.
An index that measures the dollar against six other currencies gained 0.4%, and was last at 98.07, in early Asia trading.
Against the yen, the dollar slipped 0.35% to 143 per dollar, while the Swiss franc tumbled 0.39% to 0.807 per dollar.
Risk-sensitive Asian currencies such as the Aussie dollar and the New Zealand dollar weakened 0.9% each.
Earlier in the week, the dollar index hit multi-year lows as investors were not impressed by a U.S.-China trade truce, while cooler-than-expected inflation data fuelled expectations of more aggressive interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.
The dollar is on track for weekly declines against the yen, the Swiss franc and the euro.
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Crude prices jumped more than $4 on the news as investors priced in potential supply disruptions from the oil-rich region, while gold prices climbed 0.8% to their strongest since early May.
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