* Dollar springs back against low-yielding currencies

* Yen near four-month low as U.S. bond yields gain

* Risk-sensitive currencies supported

* Graphic: World FX rates https://tmsnrt.rs/2RBWI5E

LONDON, Feb 17 (Reuters) - The dollar rose against low-yielding currencies on Wednesday, reaching a five-month high against the yen, as U.S. bond yields jumped on the prospects of further economic recovery and a possible acceleration in inflation.

Bitcoin set a record high of $51,300, a day after the cryptocurrency rose to $50,000 for the first time. That brought its total market capitalisation to more than $900 billion, as traders bet on its further acceptance among major companies.

The dollar's index against six other major currencies jumped from Tuesday's three-week low of 90.117 to last stand at 90.739.

Soaring U.S. bond yields boosted the dollar, with the 10-year yield rising as high as 1.333% from around 1.20% at the end of last week.

"The sell-off in U.S. Treasuries is the major driver of FX at the moment, with the dollar inevitably finding support, and not only vs the usual victim JPY (USD/JPY has the highest correlation in FX with US 10Y yields), as commodity currencies are actually being hit the hardest," said Francesco Pesole, G10 FX strategist at ING.

"While the bond market is doubling down on reflationary bets, other assets are failing to show signs of upbeat risk sentiment. The risk is that the rise in U.S. yields has gathered such pace so as to start being self-defeating and cause a correction in risk assets."

The yen, which is sensitive to U.S. yields, reacted the most with the dollar jumping to as high as 106.225 yen in Asian trade, its highest since September, before retreating to 105.89 yen.

"I think the dollar's downtrend is over. At the start of the year, speculators were betting on a fall in the dollar below 100 yen. They seem to have abandoned such a view now," said Yukio Ishizuki, senior strategist at Daiwa Securities.

A sign of dwindling bets on the dollar's fall against the yen is apparent in the options market. Short-term dollar call options, or bets on the dollar, have become more expensive than dollar puts, bets against the currency.

The one-week risk-reversal spread is now in favour of dollar calls for the first time in almost five years.

"If one thinks U.S. yields will rise further, we could see more gains in the dollar," said Jun Arachi, senior currency strategist at Rakuten Securities.

"I would say this trade could continue until Biden Administration's stimulus package will come into effect, possibly in March, at which point people could start unwinding their bets to 'sell-on-fact'".

Biden tried to build public support for his $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief plan in a town hall.

The euro slipped to $1.2075, though its fall was less pronounced after its gains earlier on Tuesday following strong German economic sentiment data.

The New York Federal Reserve's Empire State manufacturing report released on Tuesday offered an upbeat economic picture, with a rise in its "prices paid index" stoking concern over faster inflation.

That optimism was echoed by St. Louis Fed President James Bullard, who told CNBC that U.S. financial conditions were "generally good," and that inflation was likely to heat up this year.

San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly, however, said pressures on inflation are still downward, pushing against critics warning low interest rates and government spending could overheat the U.S. economy and spark high inflation.

"Her comments are not resonating with market players preoccupied with inflation at this point," said Daiwa's Ishizuki.

The positive mood on the economic outlook is underpinning risk-sensitive currencies.

The British pound held firm at $1.3895, having reached its highest level since April 2018 on Tuesday. Against the euro, the pound traded at its highest level since early May at 86.84 pence per euro.

The Australian dollar gained 0.2% to $0.7764, not far from Tuesday's one-month high of $0.7805.

The offshore Chinese yuan stepped back to 6.4359 per dollar after hitting a two-and-a-half-year high of 6.4010 earlier in the week.

(Reporting by Ritvik Carvalho; additional reporting by Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo; editing by Larry King)