close
MENU
2 mins to read

NZ dollar gains, pushing TWI to 78

The kiwi traded at 73.35 US cents at 5pm in Wellington.

Jonathan Underhill
Mon, 05 Sep 2016

The New Zealand dollar rose, pushing the trade-weighted index to a 16-month high, as the market reassessed Friday's non-farm payrolls data out of the US on concern jobs growth is being driven by lower-paying positions and the case for a rate hike isn't conclusive.

The kiwi traded at 73.35 US cents at 5pm in Wellington from 72.88 cents in late New York trading on Friday. It spiked as high as 73.57 cents after the payrolls data. The trade-weighted index rose as high as 78 from 77.63 on Friday, having climbed as high as 78.10 after the US data.

The TWI is once again well above the levels the Reserve Bank is projecting, with an average 76 forecast for the third quarter, suggesting the threat of further interest rate cuts isn't enough to offset the increasingly long horizon seen for any Fed rate hikes. Traders have reduced their bets for a fed rate hike in December, with headwinds in the next few months seen to include wobbles in the Chinese economy. Meanwhile, some analysts looking at the details of the jobs data on Friday have concluded a decline in the tax take on payrolls shows growth is coming from lower-paid jobs.

"We've seen some repricing of the initial reaction to the jobs numbers. There was a big increase in government employment and there's a question about the quality of the employment being created," said Sheldon Slabbert, a sales trader at CMC Markets NZ. There had been a question mark over jobs growth because it had proved to be "fairly resilient" even as measures of US gross domestic product have been revised down, he said.

Expectations for Fed rate hikes had grown in the wake of "more hawkish" comments from Fed chair Janet Yellen at Jackson Hole. "You can clearly see the market repricing that on Friday and today," Slabbert said. Meanwhile, no change is expected when the Reserve Bank of Australia reviews interest rates tomorrow and this week's GlobalDairyTrade auction may show further increases in milk powder prices, a plus for the New Zealand economy and the kiwi, he said.

Helping the case for a stronger kiwi, New Zealand commodity prices rose for a fourth month in August as the rebound in dairy continued, although a strong kiwi dollar limited gains for local producers. The ANZ Commodity Price Index increased 3.2 percent in August and was up 11 percent from a year earlier, led by higher prices for dairy, seafood, meat and aluminium products.

The New Zealand dollar rose to 96.47 Australian cents from 96.26 cents in New York on Friday. It increased to 75.792 yen from 75.54 yen and gained to 4.8959 yuan from 4.8683 yuan. It rose to 65.63 euro cents from 65.33 cents and gained to 55.05 British pence from 54.84 pence.

New Zealand's two-year swap rate rose 1 basis point to 2 percent and 10-year swaps rose 3 basis point to 2.43 percent.

(BusinessDesk)

Click the hamburger symbol top right of our homepage to access the Rich List 2016 and other sections.

Jonathan Underhill
Mon, 05 Sep 2016
© All content copyright NBR. Do not reproduce in any form without permission, even if you have a paid subscription.
NZ dollar gains, pushing TWI to 78
61389
false