The New Zealand dollar slipped from a three-week high as investors mulled US employment data which showed weak wage growth, even as the world's biggest economy added more jobs than expected last month.
The kiwi fell to 86.57 US cents at 5pm in Wellington from as high as 86.82 cents earlier in the day. It was down from 86.71 cents at 8am and 86.66 cents on Friday in New York. The trade-weighted index edged down to 80.42 at 5pm in Wellington 80.55 last week.
The local currency's strength eased in the Asian session as investors weighed up US non-farm payrolls, which showed better-than-expected jobs growth of 288,000 in April. The pick-up in employment was tempered by a declining participation rate and flat wages.
"People were hoping for a good non-farm payrolls number, and when we got it, we saw US dollar strength before the rest of the data came out," said Alex Hill, head of dealing at HiFX in Auckland. "When the US dollar decides to appreciate, it will happen quickly, but employment wasn't enough to do that for us on Saturday."
HiFX's Hill said the local currency is stuck in a range of between 85 US cents and 87 cents, with domestic data likely to weigh on the kiwi.