New Zealand Stock Markets
The New Zealand dollar is heading
for a 0.9 per cent gain against the greenback this week but may run out
of steam as investors pay more attention to a narrowing interest rate
differential with the US.
The
kiwi rose to 73.38 US cents as at 5pm in Wellington from 72.75 cents on
Friday in New York last week, in a volatile week where it soared on
jawboning from the US Treasury secretary before slumping on
softer-than-expected inflation.
The trade-weighted index is heading for a
0.3 per cent weekly decline to 74.69 and is down from 75.02 yesterday.
The local currency has gained 3.5
per cent so far this year as heightened political uncertainty has left
the greenback out of favour with a brief US federal government shutdown,
introduction of trade tariffs and looming debt ceiling.
The greenback came under greater scrutiny this week when Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin said a weaker currency was good for trade,
comments US President Donald Trump today said were taken out of context
when advocating a stronger greenback under his administration.
Trump's speech to the World Economic Forum in Davos will be a highlight for investors in the Northern Hemisphere session.
For all that, the US economy continues to report robust growth and
corporate tax cuts have underpinned a strong earnings season, helping
push stocks on Wall Street to record highs and removing barriers to the
Federal Reserve raising interest rates this year.
At the same time, New Zealand's Reserve Bank is less likely to lift the
official cash rate from its record low 1.75 per cent until 2019 after
fourth-quarter inflation data this week was well below expectations,
prompting two bank economist teams to push out their forecasts for
tighter monetary policy.
ASB's Kelleher said at current levels the kiwi looks like a 'sell' at around 73.50/74.50 US cents over the medium term.
New Zealand two-year swap rates were unchanged at 2.17 per cent, and
are down from 2.25 per cent at the end of last week, while 10-year swaps
fell 2 basis points to 3.21 per cent, and are down from 3.28 per cent
last Friday.
The local
currency traded at 91.04 Australian cents from 91.18 cents yesterday and
fell to 4.6421 Chinese yuan from 4.6702 yuan. It decreased to 59.01
euro cents from 59.36 cents yesterday and traded at 51.71 British pence
from 51.65 pence. It fell to 80.22 yen from 80.48 yen yesterday.

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