Trump Signals US Might Ease Chip Export Curbs on Some Gulf Countries  

US President Donald Trump at the White House. (Reuters) 
US President Donald Trump at the White House. (Reuters) 
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Trump Signals US Might Ease Chip Export Curbs on Some Gulf Countries  

US President Donald Trump at the White House. (Reuters) 
US President Donald Trump at the White House. (Reuters) 

US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he might ease US microchip export restrictions to some Gulf countries.

Trump is preparing for his first major diplomatic trip next week that includes a three-country Middle East tour that begins in Saudi Arabia.

“We might be doing that, yeah,” Trump said. “And it will be announced soon.”

The US government is considering reducing restrictions on Nvidia’s AI chip sales to the United Arab Emirates (UAE), reports earlier said.

The Joe Biden-era rule that curbed the export of sophisticated artificial-intelligence chips, had sparked widespread controversy.

Meanwhile, Trump said he will not reduce tariffs on Chinese goods before the upcoming US-China trade talks in Switzerland.

Trump spoke to reporters at the White House on Wednesday about the trade negotiations that are scheduled to take place on Saturday and Sunday.

The US President was asked whether he would be willing to cut the tariffs to bring China to the negotiating table. He replied, “No.”

However, he sent mixed signals later, telling reporters he would look at specific industry requests for exemptions, but preferred to keep the duties broader and less complicated.

In 2018, the Trump administration exempted some products produced in China from 25% tariffs, including bicycle helmets and child-safety furniture such as car seats and playpens. However, car seat component parts, cribs, bassinets, diaper bags and wooden safety gates were not exempted.



Dollar and Other Safe Havens Rise as Israel Strikes Iran

US dollar banknotes are seen in this photo illustration taken February 12, 2018. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez/Illustration/File Photo
US dollar banknotes are seen in this photo illustration taken February 12, 2018. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez/Illustration/File Photo
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Dollar and Other Safe Havens Rise as Israel Strikes Iran

US dollar banknotes are seen in this photo illustration taken February 12, 2018. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez/Illustration/File Photo
US dollar banknotes are seen in this photo illustration taken February 12, 2018. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez/Illustration/File Photo

The US dollar rallied alongside the safe-haven Japanese yen and Swiss franc, with currency markets abruptly reversing direction on news Israel had launched strikes on Iran.

Israel has begun carrying out strikes on Iran, two US officials told Reuters, adding that there was no US assistance or involvement in the operation. Another report suggested that explosions were heard northeast of Iran's capital Tehran.

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, Reuters reported.

Earlier in the week, the dollar index hit multi-year lows as investors were not impressed by a US-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.

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.