The New Zealand and Australian dollars advanced as investors took heart from improving Chinese data and easing tensions over Syria.
The kiwi touched a three-week high of 80.75 US cents early this morning, and traded at 80.64 cents at 8am in Wellington, from 80.44 cents at the 5pm market close yesterday. The Australian dollar rose to an 11-week high of 93.19 US cents this morning.
Stronger-than-expected industrial output and retail sales data in China bolstered optimism about growth prospects for the world's second-largest economy, while apparent Syrian acceptance of a proposal to give up chemical weapons eased concerns about US-led military action. The improving risk appetite favoured growth sensitive currencies such as the New Zealand and the Australian dollars.
"Risk appetite has brightened overnight, thanks to yesterday's encouraging Chinese data and the fading likelihood of military intervention in Syria," Mike Jones, currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand, said in a note. "The New Zealand dollar and Australian dollar have revelled in this more optimistic backdrop, while the 'safe-haven' Swiss franc, Japanese yen and US dollar have all underperformed."
There is no New Zealand data scheduled for release today ahead of the central bank's interest rate decision tomorrow.