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NZ dollar edges lower in holiday trading; greenback may advance as Fed speakers stoke rate hike bets

Thursday 12th November 2015

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The New Zealand dollar edged lower in light trading due to the US Veterans Day holiday, ahead of speeches by Federal Reserve officials which may bolster the case for a US interest rate hike, and push the greenback higher.

The kiwi declined to 65.55 US cents at 8am in Wellington, from 65.81 cents at 5pm yesterday. The trade-weighted index slipped to 71.58 from 71.78 yesterday.

The US dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies, has gained 2 percent so far this month after Fed officials signalled US interest rates could rise in December and following better-than-expected US employment data. In the US today, traders will be looking for further confirmation that the Fed is eyeing a potential rate hike in speeches by Fed chair Janet Yellen, vice chair Stanley Fisher, New York Fed president Bill Dudley, St Louis Fed president James Bullard, Richmond Fed president Jeffrey Lacker, and Chicago Fed president Charles Evans.

"Moves overnight were relatively shallow as the US is on holiday so volumes were lower," said Stuart Ive, OMF senior dealer, foreign exchange. "We have a fistful of US Fed speakers tonight. If they are to mention monetary policy out of the US it's only going to be in one direction and that is that they are probably looking to move in December. The market will be reacting to any monetary policy comments, clearly."

In the near term, the kiwi has support at 65.40 US cents and faces resistance at 65.90 cents, he said.

Ive expects the kiwi to trade in a tight range until next week's GlobalDairyTrade auction, where futures are signalling further declines.

Reports due out in New Zealand today include the BNZ-BusinessNZ performance of manufacturing index, October food prices, and the ANZ-Roy Morgan consumer confidence survey.

The New Zealand dollar edged lower to 92.91 Australian cents, from 92.99 cents yesterday ahead of Australian October employment data today.

The kiwi was little changed at 61.03 euro cents from 61.10 cents yesterday ahead of testimony from European Central Bank president Mario Draghi tonight, where traders will be looking for signals that more stimulus is likely.

The local currency fell to 43.09 British pence from 43.36 pence yesterday after a report showed the UK jobless rate fell while wages rose more slowly than forecast. It fell to 80.57 yen from 80.83 yen yesterday, and to 4.1737 yuan from 4.1868 yuan.

 

 

 

 

BusinessDesk.co.nz



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