Kiwi holds near 81 US cents as fiscal cliff talks loom
Global markets have become more risk averse this week, with a run of weak data and increased hostility in the Gaza Strip.
Global markets have become more risk averse this week, with a run of weak data and increased hostility in the Gaza Strip.
The New Zealand dollar traded at just above 81 US cents, having weakened this week as global risk aversion evaporated and stockmarkets weakened, while traders are awaiting any early news on the US fiscal cliff talks.
The kiwi traded at 81.03 US cents at 5pm in Wellington from 80.95 cents at the start of the day and from 81.22 cents the previous day. The trade-weighted index was at 72.87, up from 72.80 at opening.
US President Barack Obama and Republican lawmakers are due to meet this weekend to find a way to avoid the so-called fiscal cliff, a mix of tax increases and spending cuts that will kick in automatically on January 1 and risk hampering the already-fragile economy.
Global markets have become more risk averse this week, with a run of weak global data and increased hostility in the Gaza Strip.
"The general pattern seems to be a reasonable amount of risk aversion on the market that has weighed on the Australian dollar and the kiwi," says Chris Tennent-Brown, FX economist at Commonwealth bank of Australia.
The kiwi is still broadly within its recent range of 81 cents to 83 cents. In the near term, negotiations in the US over the fiscal cliff are likely to dominate. If agreement cannot be reached, there is a risk the US economy falls back into recession and weighs on global growth, he says.
The kiwi traded at 65.59 yen from 65.68 yen amid talk elections next month could install the main opposition party and lead to more concerted efforts to weaken Japan's currency.
It ended at 78.40 Australian cents from 78.36 cents, rose to 63.45 euro cents from 63.35 cents, and traded little changed at 51.07 British pence.
(BusinessDesk)