Message : Required fields NEW YORK (Reuters) - The dollar edged lower on Wednesday following a tame U.S. inflation report and a tepid auction of benchmark 10-year Treasury notes, while riskier currencies like the Australian and New Zealand dollars rose on improving global growth prospects. U.S. consumer prices posted their biggest annual gain in a year, though underlying inflation remained tepid amid sluggish demand for services like airline travel, the data showed. The move was largely in line with economists' expectations, though core inflation rose 0.1% versus market forecasts for a 0.2% rise. U.S. Treasury yields slid following the data, as market participants had hoped for a more upbeat outlook on consumer prices.