NZ dollar hits three month high vs Aussie
The kiwi hit 93.86Ac and was trading at 93.31Ac at 8am in Wellington.
The kiwi hit 93.86Ac and was trading at 93.31Ac at 8am in Wellington.
The New Zealand dollar touched a three-month high against the Australian dollar as investors favoured the higher returns available on this side of the Tasman.
The kiwi hit 93.86Ac and was trading at 93.31Ac at 8am in Wellington, from 93.42Ac at 5pm yesterday. The local currency edged up to 67.42USc from 67.31USc.
Investors are favouring the kiwi over the Aussie to take advantage of New Zealand's higher relative interest rates. Australia's central bank cut its benchmark interest rate a quarter point to 1.75% this month while New Zealand's central bank held its rate at 2.25% at last month's meeting. That has propelled the kiwi higher, approaching a key technical level of 94Ac, which could see it break higher still, hurting the competitiveness of exporters to New Zealand's second-largest market.
"It looks as though the kiwi/Aussie wants to go higher," said Derek Rankin, a director at Rankin Treasury Advisory. "Interest rates are higher in New Zealand than they are in Australia. If you are actually looking to invest in this part of the world, the base rate for Australia is being lowered down to 1.75% and the base rate for New Zealand is at 2.25 so you can get a half a percent more."
Rankin expects New Zealand's Reserve Bank to reduce its benchmark interest rate at the next meeting on June 9, to help push down the Aussie cross rate, although he notes it's a "line ball decision."
In New Zealand today, April data for migration, tourism and credit spending is released.
The New Zealand dollar advanced to 60.21 euro cents from 60.01 cents, and gained to 4.4120 yuan from 4.4036 yuan. It was little changed at 46.19 British pence from 46.17 pence, and at ¥74.11 yen from ¥74.07. The trade-weighted index rose to 72.63 from 72.55.
(BusinessDesk)