Dollar weakens amid uncertainty about Greek bailout
Kiwi dropped to 67.01USc at 8am in Wellington.
Kiwi dropped to 67.01USc at 8am in Wellington.
The New Zealand dollar weakened as investors favoured safe haven assets after concern rose about the future of cash-strapped Greece when eurozone leaders stepped up their demands for reforms at meetings over the weekend.
The kiwi dropped to 67.01USc at 8am in Wellington, from 67.22USc at the New York close and 67.61USc at 5pm on Friday. The trade-weighted index fell to 70.87 from 71.29 on Friday.
Investors are feeling less confident that a deal between Greece and its creditors will be reached after no agreement was secured at weekend meetings. Eurozone leaders told Greek officials at an emergency summit on Sunday that it must enact key tax, pension and privatisation reforms by Wednesday before they will restart talks.
"Optimism around a Greek deal that had built up into week's end has faded somewhat this morning, as eurozone leaders are yet to formally agree on a path forward," Bank of New Zealand currency strategist Raiko Shareef said in a note. "We will soon see whether Greece elects to swallow this particularly bitter pill, as a signal of good will. That would open the path to detailed negotiations about (necessary) debt reduction.
"There remains some uncertainty about whether Germany and the other hard-line creditors will accept the proposal put up by the finance ministers. That has contributed to the slightly risk-off start to the week. We expect the New Zealand dollar to remain sensitive to risk appetite but continue to see potential for a strong squeeze higher in the event of a deal being struck."
In New Zealand today, June data on food prices and house sales are expected to be released. Traders will also be eyeing Chinese trade data for June, also scheduled for release today.
The New Zealand dollar slipped to 60.33 euro cents from 60.92 cents on Friday, fell to 43.17 British pence from 43.89p, dropped to ¥81.91 from ¥82.31 and edged lower to 90.29Ac from 90.34Ac.
(BusinessDesk)