close
MENU
2 mins to read

NZ dollar falls on rumours of RBNZ meeting, then recovers


The central bank denied it was holding an ermgency meeting to change interest rates.

NZPA
Fri, 25 Feb 2011

The New Zealand dollar fell today on rumours the Reserve Bank was holding an emergency meeting but recovered when the central bank denied the rumour.

Investors are wondering if the bank will cut the official cash rate because the Christchurch earthquake is expected to reduce economic growth and if it will do so outside its usual timetable for announcements.

Dealers said the RBNZ has only once cut rates as an emergency measure -- after the September 11 tragedy in the US. The next regular announcement on monetary policy is on March 10.

The NZ dollar was at 75.08USc at 5pm, from 74.69USc at 8am and 74.75USc at 5pm yesterday. It had tested the 74.40USc level on Thursday night.

The NZ dollar earlier spiked higher around lunchtime when Standard & Poor's Ratings Services said its New Zealand sovereign ratings were not immediately affected by the Christchurch earthquake.

"In our view, it is still too early to assess the overall implications of the considerable disruption to the Canterbury region and the broader New Zealand economy," S&P said today. "The government has sufficient flexibility to absorb additional fiscal costs without a negative impact on its creditworthiness."

Meanwhile, the Australian dollar rose to a decade high against the NZ dollar on diverging outlooks for interest rates in the two countries. The NZ dollar fell to 74.07Ac at 5pm from 74.12Ac at 8am and 74.21USc at 5pm yesterday.

Imre Speizer, senior strategist at Westpac, said investors would continue to be nervous about the possibility of a rate cut in New Zealand before March 10.

The US dollar has been weak amid a surge in oil prices as investors feared a civil uprising in Libya could spill over to other top producers, including Saudi Arabia.

Further hurting the US dollar -- especially against the euro -- were comments by St Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard saying the Fed can "never say never" to another round of quantitative easing, a scenario that typically undermines the greenback.

In contrast, the European Central Bank continued its hawkish rhetoric, with ECB policymaker Axel Weber saying the only way for euro zone rates to go is up.

The NZ dollar was at €0.5431 at 5pm from €0.5428 at the same time yesterday, and was ¥61.51 from ¥61.42. The trade weighted index rose to 66.38 at 5pm from 66.22 yesterday.

NZPA
Fri, 25 Feb 2011
© All content copyright NBR. Do not reproduce in any form without permission, even if you have a paid subscription.

Free News Alerts

Sign up to get the latest stories and insights delivered to your inbox – free, every day.

I’m already subscribed/joined

Free News Alerts

Sign up to get the latest stories and insights delivered to your inbox – free, every day.

I’m already subscribed/joined
NZ dollar falls on rumours of RBNZ meeting, then recovers
12665
false