close
MENU
1 mins to read

Dollar rises to two-week high on improved risk sentiment

Stocks on Wall Street and in Europe were broadly stronger overnight.

Jonathan Underhill
Thu, 20 Oct 2016

The New Zealand dollar rose to a two-week high as gains in equity markets and commodities such as crude oil helped underpin currencies linked to global growth such as the kiwi and the Australian dollar.

The kiwi rose to 72.28USc at 8am in Wellington, having earlier touched a two-week high of 72.48USc, from 72.12USc late yesterday.

The trade-weighted index edged up to 77.38 from 77.29.

Stocks on Wall Street and in Europe were broadly stronger overnight while crude oil climbed to a 15-month high, helping lift the CRB Index of 19 commonly traded commodities by 0.5%.

Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve said in its Beige Book regional survey that economic activity in the US "continued to expand during the reporting period from late August to early October," and outlooks in most districts were "positive.”

"Most equity markets gained, as did oil, helping pro-risk currencies the Australian dollar and the New Zealand dollar rise further," Westpac Banking Corp market strategist Imre Speizer says.

Mr Speizer says a break above 72.30-72.40USc, which is a technically significant level, "would have bullish implications for the days ahead."

The kiwi has gained this week after stronger than expected third-quarter inflation figures suggest a cut in interest rates expected from the Reserve Bank next month may be the last in its easing cycle.

The kiwi dollar fell to 93.60Ac from 94.02Ac late yesterday and edged up to 58.88 British pence from 58.71 pence. It rose to 65.86€c from 65.66€c, fell to 74.73 yen from 74.87 yen and rose to 4.8668 yuan from 4.8615 yuan.

(BusinessDesk)

 

Jonathan Underhill
Thu, 20 Oct 2016
© All content copyright NBR. Do not reproduce in any form without permission, even if you have a paid subscription.
Dollar rises to two-week high on improved risk sentiment
62508
false