close
MENU
Hot Topic Long reads
Hot Topic Long reads
1 mins to read

Dollar weakens as commodity prices fall

Kiwi slipped to 65.71USc at 8am in Wellington.

Tina Morrison
Mon, 27 Jul 2015

The New Zealand dollar fell after signs of weaker Chinese manufacturing activity weighed on commodity prices, denting demand for commodity currencies.

The kiwi slipped to 65.71USc at 8am in Wellington, from 65.76USc at the New York close and 65.81USc at 5pm on Friday. The trade-weighted index edged lower to 70.18 from 70.22.

Commodity currencies have been downbeat since the preliminary China Caixin purchasing managers' index weakened on Friday, raising concern that a slowing Chinese economy will reduce global demand for raw materials. The CRB commodities index fell 0.9% to a six-year low, driven by broad-based falls that spanned grains, energy, soft commodities and iron ore. Precious metals such as gold, silver and platinum bucked the trend, though West Texas Intermediate crude oil futures and Brent oil prices both declined.

"Global commodity prices continue to drive New Zealand dollar (and other commodity currencies) lower," ANZ Bank New Zealand senior economist Mark Smith and senior foreign exchange strategist Sam Tuck said in a note. "The question is if and when commodity prices will find a base. Until that occurs, the New Zealand dollar will remain under pressure."

ANZ expects the kiwi to trade between 65.20-66.20USc today.

Tonight, traders will be eyeing the German IFO business sentiment survey for July and a gauge of US durable goods orders for June.

The New Zealand dollar advanced to 90.39Ac cents from 90.20Ac on Friday as weaker commodity prices weighed more heavily on the Aussie currency.

The kiwi fell to 59.81 euro cents from 59.98 cents on Friday, declined to 42.35 British pence from 42.43p, and edged lower to ¥81.23 from ¥81.55.

(BusinessDesk)

Tina Morrison
Mon, 27 Jul 2015
© All content copyright NBR. Do not reproduce in any form without permission, even if you have a paid subscription.
Dollar weakens as commodity prices fall
49893
false