Sharechat Logo

Dollar declines as Wall Street stages late slide

By Paul McBeth

Thursday 26th February 2009

Text too small?
The New Zealand dollar fell after Wall Street staged a late retreat, reflecting weak home sales data and dividend cuts at insurance companies, stoking traders to eschew high-yielding, or riskier, assets.

US home re-sales plummeted 5.3% for the month of January even though falling prices made them more affordable, signaling the housing crisis is set to continue and helping a decline in US equities.

Weak sentiment in Eastern Europe continued with the ratings service Standard and Poor's downgrading Ukraine's long- and short-term foreign currency credit rating to CCC+. Fears of a deepening global recession encouraged currency traders to eschew risk in favour of the greenback.

"Risk is still the main concern," said Philip Borkin, economist at ANZ National Bank. "We're just waiting for some bad news - the next couple of days could be the circuit-breaker."

The kiwi fell to 50.86 US cents from 51.87 cents yesterday, and dropped to 49.48 yen from 50.29 yen. It declined to 78.73 Australian cents from 79.20 cents yesterday, and decreased to 39.94 euro cents from 40.35 cents.

Borkin said the kiwi may trade between 50.63 US cents and 51.69 cents today, as it continues to enjoy some level of support. The currency is still receiving support from uridashi bond holders, with some rolling over their investments, he said.

The domestic economy is expected to show ongoing fears about the global slump, when the National Bank Business Survey comes out today. "December's survey was dreadful (as was the Q4 QSBO, released mid-January) and if the weakening in the global outlook since then is anything to go by, February's update will look at least as bad," said BNZ currency strategist Danica Hampton.

The New Zealand economy began shrinking at the start of 2008, falling into its first recession since 1998, and the Treasury said it may have entered a fifth quarter of contraction.

  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

NZ dollar gains on G20 preference for growth
NZ dollar dips as Wellington CBD checked for quake damage
NZ dollar gains, bolstered by RBA minutes, strong dairy prices
NZ dollar falls after central bank says it may scale up currency intervention
NZ dollar gains before CPI, helped by dairy gains, rally on Wall Street
NZ dollar trades little changed as US budget talks bear down on deadline
NZ dollar falls with equities on view US to sail over fiscal cliff
NZ dollar weakens as fiscal cliff looms, long bets unwind
NZ dollar sinks to three-week low as equities fall, fiscal talks in focus
NZ dollar slips as fiscal cliff talks grind slower in Washington