
The dollar-won exchange rate closed near 1,466 as overnight gains accelerated, with 'Sell America' pressure easing after President Trump's comments on Greenland, prompting renewed dollar strength and a weaker won.

The dollar-yen slipped to 158.02 in Tokyo as broad selling of U.S. assets continued, with market volatility easing after Japanese bond yields stabilized and fiscal concerns ahead of Japan's election kept yen under pressure.
‘This is sell America’:🚨US$, TSY prices tumble & gold spikes as globe flees #USAssets. Trump’s latest threats around #Greenland pushed global investors to shift exposure away from US-centric investments. The US$ index headed for its biggest decline since Apr. US bond prices tumbled, sending yields spiking.
The #TrumpRegime is an existential threat to #Americans, #immigrants, ppl: globally, #investors holding US$, bonds & stocks...
#Economy #NewWorldOrder #Protest #USPol
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/01/20/sell-america-trade-dollar-treasury-gold-us-trump-greenland.html
Asian investors have trimmed US asset allocations amid dollar weakness, with Morgan Stanley reporting a decline in US portfolio share and highlighting challenges in further reducing exposure due to limited alternatives.
China's yuan strengthened as authorities pledged strong consumption support, while US assets' share in Korea's overseas holdings hit a record high; global markets saw mixed moves amid Fed succession speculation, tech stock volatility, and policy shifts.