NZ dollar sheds gains after China posts unexpected trade surplus
The kiwi fell in local trading after China unexpectedly reported a trade surplus, damping speculation the People's Bank of China will loosen monetary policy to support growth.
The kiwi fell in local trading after China unexpectedly reported a trade surplus, damping speculation the People's Bank of China will loosen monetary policy to support growth.
BUSINESSDESK: The New Zealand dollar fell in local trading after China unexpectedly reported a trade surplus, damping speculation the People’s Bank of China will loosen monetary policy to support growth.
The kiwi fell to 82.01 US in New York. The trade weighted index rose to 73.28 from 73.13.
China unexpectedly reported a trade surplus ilast month, stoking optimism the PBOC won’t need to cut rates to stimulate the world’s second-biggest economy.
The surplus was $US5.35 billion, the customs bureau said, beating a deficit of $US3.15b predicted by economists in a Bloomberg News survey.
Exports rose 8.9% from a year earlier, while inbound ships increased 5.3%.
“The New Zealand dollar rallied through most of the morning,” said Dan Bell, currency strategists at HiFX.
“Then we had a larger than expected trade surplus and that has given the market more confidence that China hasn’t fallen off a cliff.”
Bell said the New Zealand dollar remains range-bound, trading at the top end of its recent range of 80.50 US cents to 82.60 cents.
That is in line with today’s BusinessDesk survey, with four out of five analysts surveyed predicting the New Zealand dollar will finish the week higher.
US Federal Reserve chairmen Ben Bernanke today delivered a speech titled Fostering Financial Stability, which reinforced his view that the world’s largest economy hasn’t fully recovered from the global financial crisis.
A US Labor Department report on Friday revived speculation the Fed will embark on another round of on another round of quantitative easing after it showed weaker-than expected jobs growth, which boosted demand for high-yielding currencies such as the kiwi.
“The market remains preoccupied with quantitative easing and it’s getting a little bit predictable,” Bell said.
US data out this week includes the Fed’s Beige Book later tomorrow, followed by a Michigan consumer confidence survey on Friday.
The New Zealand Institute of Economic Research’s quarterly survey of business opinion is scheduled for release tomorrow, and is one of three key pieces of data the Reserve Bank uses in setting monetary policy.
The New Zealand dollar rose to 79.54 Australian cents from 79.16 cents last week.
The kiwi gained to 62.45 euro cents from 62.27 cents on Friday in New York and was little changed at 51.48 British pence from 51.46 pence.
It increased to 66.73 yen from 66.50 yen.