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NZ dollar gains vs yen after failed North Korea missile test; dairy auction looms

Tuesday 18th April 2017

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The New Zealand dollar rose against the yen as tensions over the Korean peninsula failed to rattle financial markets and measures of risk appetite improved.

The kiwi dollar rose to 76.39 yen as at 8am in Wellington from 76.05 yen late yesterday and from 76.19 yen last Thursday, before the four-day Easter holiday. The local dollar slipped to 70.08 US cents from 70.22 cents yesterday to be little changed from 70.02 cents last Thursday.

US stocks rose and the VIX fell to its lowest in almost a week as North Korea unsuccessfully launched a test missile over the weekend, as US vice president Mike Pence was arriving in the south for talks with South Korean acting president Hwang Kyo-ahn. Pence warned the isolated state not to test US resolve. The US dollar gained from its overnight lows after US Treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin said a strong dollar was good for the US economy over the long term, comments that appeared to run counter to President Donald Trump's remark that the greenback was too strong.

"It has been somewhat of a rollercoaster ride over the past week or so, with risk sentiment, politics, and USD direction dominating, but familiar ranges have held," said Philip Borkin, senior economist at ANZ Bank New Zealand, in a note. "A lack of retaliation for the failed North Korean missile helped buoy sentiment and a relief rally for equities."

The VIX is the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, and is known as Wall Street's fear gauge.

With no local economic data scheduled for today, traders are looking ahead to tonight's GlobalDairyTrade auction, amid expectations whole milk powder prices could rise 5 percent, based on NZX dairy futures. The greenback had been weaker on a US dollar index basis after measures of inflation for March printed more sluggish than expected.

The trade-weighted index slipped to 76.05 from 76.14.

The kiwi dollar fell to 4.8201 yuan from 4.8364 yuan yesterday as Chinese data showed retail sales and industrial production both came in stronger than expected in March from a year earlier.

The local dollar traded at 55.76 British pence from 56 pence late yesterday and fell to 65.85 euro cents from 66.12 cents.

 

 

 

(BusinessDesk)

 



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