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Kiwi hits record high against euro after Spanish bailout approved


The New Zealand dollar takes off after policymakers finally approve a 100 billion euro bailout for Spain's banking sector.

Jonathan Underhill
Mon, 23 Jul 2012

BUSINESSDESK: The New Zealand dollar rose to record high versus the euro after policymakers finally approved a 100 billion euro bailout for Spain's banking sector.

The kiwi rose as a high as 65.98 euro cents, the most since the single currency entered circulation in 2002, from 65.74 cents at the close of trading in New York. It traded at 65.80 cents at 8am and declined to 79.70 US cents from 79.93 cents.

Eurozone finance ministers met by conference call on Friday to finally approve an agreement to provide aid to Spain.

The move did little to ease concern about Europe’s woes, with Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy forecasting a second year of recession and Valencia becoming the first region to seek a rescue from the nation's central government.

"It is the Spanish news which sent the euro tumbling," said Stuart Ive, currency strategist at HiFX. "Certainly, it's not good news but I don't think it will lead to a Spanish sovereign bailout.

"The kiwi and the Aussie are still holding up remarkably well," he said. Against the US dollar the kiwi is "still in last week's trading range. It's just at the bottom end of it – I think we will continue in this range."

In a sign that investors still see Spain as high risk, Spanish 10-year government bond yields closed the week up 27 basis points at 7.19% on Friday.

Officials from the European Central Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the European Commission will return to Greece this week to decide whether to release more funds from a 130 billion euro rescue package.

There is no significant data set for release in New Zealand today.

The kiwi was little changed at 76.90 Australian cents at 8am from 76.93 cents at the close of trading in New York. It was largely unchanged at 51.03 British pence from 51.13 pence and dropped to 62.50 yen from 62.71 yen.

The trade weighted index was little changed on 72.34 from 72.40.

Jonathan Underhill
Mon, 23 Jul 2012
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Kiwi hits record high against euro after Spanish bailout approved
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