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Dollar strengthens as Trump says Iran peace offer 'unacceptable'

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Dollar rises on strong U.S. jobs data and Iran tensions, while oil jumps over 3% after Trump rejects Tehran’s peace response, boosting safe-haven demand

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The dollar advanced against its major peers in early Asia trade on Monday, supported by strong U.S. jobs data released late last week and as ​the U.S.-Iran ceasefire hung by a thread, boosting demand for the safe-haven ‌currency.

The euro was down 0.2% at $1.1767, the yen slipped 0.1% to 156.905 yen per dollar and the British pound was 0.3% lower at $1.3597. The risk-sensitive Australian dollar slipped 0.2% to $0.7234, while its kiwi counterpart weakened ​0.3% to $0.5948.

"We start the new trading week, as has so often been the ​case of late, reacting to geopolitical headlines," said Chris Weston, head of research ⁠at Pepperstone Group Ltd in Melbourne.

Oil prices jumped as trading resumed on Monday, with Brent ​crude up 3.3% at $104.65 a barrel, after President Donald Trump on Sunday rejected Iran's response to a U.S. ​proposal for peace talks, dashing hopes for an imminent end to the 10-week-old conflict.

"I don’t like it — TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE," Trump wrote on Truth Social, without giving further detail.

Against the Chinese yuan , the U.S. dollar was flat at ​6.7951 yuan in offshore trade after data released at the weekend showed China's export growth accelerated ​in April. Exports increased 14.1% from a year earlier in dollar terms, outpacing the 2.5% gain in ‌March and ⁠a 7.9% rise tipped by economists as factories raced to meet AI-related demand.

The dollar index , which measures the greenback's strength against a basket of six currencies, was trading at 98.001 in early Asia. The greenback has found support from the U.S. jobs report released Friday that showed ​non-farm payrolls increased 115,000 ​in April, almost twice ⁠as fast as expected. Those figures reinforced expectations the Federal Reserve would keep interest rates unchanged for some time.

"The dollar remained on the ​back foot last week, with the market laser-focused on prospects for ​a gradual reopening ⁠of the Strait of Hormuz, with the breakthrough potentially coinciding with the Trump-Xi meeting," strategists from Barclays wrote in a research report.

"That said, U.S. data remains resilient and the labour market appears ⁠to ​have stabilised across a number of data sets," they added.

Trump ​and Chinese President Xi Jinping are set to discuss Iran, Taiwan, artificial intelligence, nuclear weapons and critical minerals when ​they meet later this week, according to U.S. officials.

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