|
Wednesday 14th August 2013 |
Text too small? |
The New Zealand dollar weakened as investors bet retail sales growth in the US suggests a revival in the world's largest economy which will prompt the Federal Reserve to start tapering its monetary stimulus next month.
The kiwi slipped to 79.64 US cents at 8am in Wellington, from 79.97 cents at the 5pm market close yesterday. The trade-weighted index dipped to 75.15 from 75.21 yesterday.
The US dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of other currencies, jumped after a report showed US retail sales rose in July for a fourth month. Investors are betting positive economic data will prompt the Fed at its next meeting in September to reduce its US$85 billion a month bond buying quantitative easing programme which has debased the US currency.
"There was broad US dollar strength," said Martin Rudings, a senior advisor at OM Financial. "The market is now perceiving that the tapering of the US QE will start in September and the case is getting stronger as we go through more data,"
In New Zealand today, traders will be eyeing a report at 10:45am expected to show second quarter retail sales rose a buoyant 1.3 percent.
"I suspect the data in New Zealand will start getting better in the September quarter," said OM Financial's Rudings. "The New Zealand economy is still looking pretty robust."
To be sure, Rudings said the stronger driver for the local currency is the tapering of monetary stimulus in the US.
"Essentially they are endorsing the fact that the US economy is recovering and no longer requires them to expand their balance sheet - it is the beginning of normalising everything that was skewed after the global financial crisis," Rudings said. "Now we are unwinding all that. It took five years to put it on, we will probably get it off within a year."
The kiwi could slide down below 70 US cents by the end of the year should tapering start in September, he said.
The New Zealand dollar weakened to 87.36 Australian cents at 8am in Wellington from 87.47 yesterday. The local currency dropped to 51.51 British pence from 51.68 yesterday and was little changed at 60 euro cents. The kiwi advanced to 78.10 yen from 77.78 yen yesterday.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
No comments yet
Fonterra announces Mainland Group leadership change
OCA - Oceania announces Director changes as part of Board refresh
AIA - Analyst and media webcast for FY26 interim results
The Warehouse Group confirms leaner operating structure
SML - Synlait provides half year performance update
RYM - Refreshed strategy and new capital management framework
ENS - Clarification of Gina Tuzcet’s status
BGP - 4th Quarter Sales to 25 January 2026
Contact Energy 2026 Half Year Results Presentation
February 2nd Morning Report