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Wednesday 5th July 2017 |
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The New Zealand dollar gained against its trans-Tasman counterpart as the Reserve Bank of Australia retained a neutral bias while keeping its cash rate unchanged yesterday, putting it at odds with major central banks that are talking up the prospect of rate hikes.
The kiwi rose to 95.74 Australian cents as at 8am in Wellington from 95.31 cents late yesterday. The local currency traded at 72.86 US cents from 72.70 cents yesterday with financial markets in the world's biggest economy closed for the July 4 Independence Day holiday.
The RBA kept its target cash rate 1.5 percent yesterday, as expected, but surprised some investors by reiterating guidance that it anticipated keeping rates on hold for some time. A recovery in iron ore prices had some questioning whether the RBA would join other central bankers in noting a growing inflation trend that could prompt rates to rise after a near-decade of extraordinarily loose monetary policy. Sweden's Riksbank was the latest in adding its voice to the chorus, with governor Stefan Ingves saying while there was no immediate need to hike rates they'll probably start moving next year.
"The RBA didn’t follow the seemingly coordinated change in guidance from other global central banks over the past week or so, very much sticking to its previous script," Bank of New Zealand economist Doug Steel said in a note. "NZD/AUD popped higher post-RBA and has ground higher overnight."
The kiwi didn't budge after the latest GlobalDairyTrade auction where the trade-weighted price for dairy products slipped 0.4 percent, although prices for whole milk powder - New Zealand's key export commodity - rose 2.6 percent to US$3,111 a tonne. Separately, Quotable Value housing data showed a continuing slowdown in the pace of house price inflation.
In local data today, the ANZ Commodity Price Index for June is scheduled for release at 1pm.
The trade-weighted index increased to 78.35 from 78.08 yesterday The kiwi gained to 4.9547 Chinese yuan from 4.9406 yuan, advanced to 64.23 euro cents from 63.93 cents and increased to 56.39 British pence from 56.15 pence. The kiwi gained to 82.54 yen from 82.24 yen yesterday.
(BusinessDesk)
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