The dollar starts the week with minor profits after Trump's threat of Colombia

The US dollar started with modest profits this week, after President Donald Trump threatened to impose customs definitions on Colombia because he refused to allow trek aircraft to be deported to land in the country. The US currency was revoked after a week in 14 months and rose 0.2% against the euro, and a little less against Australian and New Zealand dollars. The US dollar has decreased earlier, after traders in the first week of Trump’s power saw a lot of speech and some customs duties. Trump has ordered the imposition of 25% emergency rates for emergency conditions on all Colombian goods to the United States, which will be increased to 50% within one week. ‘The verbs are stronger than the words’ The traders were optimistic with caution after Trump’s first days brought only threats, not the new fees he promised during the election campaign. “The actions speak higher than words.” The situation with Colombia explains the ease of using customs tariffs as a tool for negotiation, “says Dan Seikov, the main masconomic strategy and foreign currencies at Sparbank 1 markets as in Oslo. He added:” There will be more developments on the customs tariff front, and the US dollar rise is far from the coming. “Mexican Bizo fell by 0.3% in the early transactions, with the decline in the derived from the coming. In Latin America.