The New Zealand Herald

Kiwi falls as traders await Fed’s statement

- — BusinessDe­sk

The New Zealand dollar fell as traders speculated that Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen may echo recent hawkish statements by other Fed officials, giving impetus to the greenback.

The kiwi traded at US72.79c as at 5pm yesterday, from US73.16c late on Tuesday. The trade-weighted index fell to 77.16 from 77.38, still above the RBNZ’s projection for the TWI to average 76 this quarter.

Yellen’s speech at the Jackson Hole retreat for central bankers on Saturday has come into sharper focus after Fed vice chair Stanley Fischer signalled in a speech last weekend that a 2016 rate hike was still under considerat­ion and that measures of employment and productivi­ty in the US economy, were close to meeting the central bank’s goals. A hawkish Yellen could undermine a Kiwi dollar that has been a standout because of the high yields available and relatively robust New Zealand growth.

“The Kiwi dollar looks very compelling for overseas investors with high yields and it looks like some commoditie­s are recovering in the second half of this year,” said Angus Nicholson, market analyst at IG Markets.

The market is pricing just a 50:50 chance that the Fed will hike interest rates in December.

“It will only take one or two major US data misses to see that likelihood disappear and the market start looking ahead to 2017,” Nicholson said.

The local currency rose as high as US73.44c after the Reserve Bank on Tuesday reiterated expectatio­ns for 35 basis points of further cuts to the official cash rate, but pushed back against critics calling for either a pause or more aggressive action.

The speech, written by governor Graeme Wheeler and delivered by assistant governor John McDermott, said a lower rate was needed to prevent weak low inflation expectatio­ns from bedding in, but to go faster would risk promoting instabilit­y in the financial system.

The kiwi was little changed at A95.69c from A95.71c on Tuesday and fell to 4.8458 Chinese yuan from 4.8668 yuan. It traded at 64.45 euro cents from 64.57c and declined to 55.24 British pence from 55.64p. The kiwi decreased to ¥73.13 from ¥73.29 on Tuesday.

New Zealand’s two-year swap was unchanged at 1.97 per cent and 10-year swaps fell 1 basis point to 2.41 per cent.

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