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Kiwi dips on rumour of White House staff departure

Also, Spanish terror attack sap risk appetite.

Paul McBeth
Fri, 18 Aug 2017

The New Zealand dollar slipped back below 73 US cents as investors' appetite for riskier assets waned as rumours circulate that the US national economic council chief Gary Cohn might resign and as Spain became the latest target of a terror attack.

The kiwi fell to 72.86 US cents as at 8am in Wellington from 73.28 cents yesterday. The trade-weighted index declined to 76.88 from 77.13.

The Chicago Board Options Exchange's volatility index jumped 32 percent to 15.55 and stocks on Wall Street dropped as investors scaled back their bets on risk-sensitive assets. Rumours that Cohn plans to quit his role in the White House raised fears that US President Donald Trump's pro-business plans could be derailed, while a terror attack in Barcelona killing at least 13 people and injuring 50 others added to the downbeat tone in financial markets.

"Market volatility has been remarkably contained to date given the degree of policy uncertainty, and last night's price action/lift in volatility is just a case of some catch-up," ANZ Bank New Zealand chief economist Cameron Bagrie said in a note. "Clearly plenty happening and the NZD finds itself in roughly the same position as yesterday. Our view remains unchanged and we continue to favour fading NZD strength."

The kiwi traded at 62.11 euro cents from 62.20 cents yesterday after minutes to the last European Central Bank meeting noted stronger growth in the regional bloc, but said expansionary monetary policy was needed to stir inflation to 2 percent. The local currency was little changed at 56.61 British pence from 56.78 pence.

The kiwi dropped to 79.74 yen from 80.51 yen and fell to 4.8619 Chinese yuan from 4.8861 yuan. The local currency traded at 92.31 Australian cents from 92.39 cents yesterday.

No local data is scheduled for today.

(BusinessDesk)

Paul McBeth
Fri, 18 Aug 2017
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Kiwi dips on rumour of White House staff departure
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