The New Zealand dollar fell against the greenback and gained against the euro after the Cyprus parliament rejected a bank tax proposed as part of a European Union bailout, leaving the rescue plan in disarray and denting risk sentiment.
The kiwi dollar fell to 82.33 US cents from 82.53 cents at 5pm in Wellington yesterday. The local currency gained to 63.96 euro cents from 63.70 cents.
Cyprus rejected the EU's conditions in the face of anger among its citizens at the prospect their bank deposits would be raided, leaving the tiny nation at risk of financial failure. While Cyprus and the 10 billion euro bailout is a only a small part of the EU, investors fret it may set a precedent for wider turmoil. Risk assets such as stocks, the kiwi and Australian dollars weakened.
"The Cyprus situation is dragging on the euro - it is unclear as to how the stalemate will be resolved," said Alex Sinton, senior dealer at ANZ New Zealand. The kiwi and Australian dollars fell as uncertainty over Cyprus sent investors back to the relative safety of the greenback, he said.
The New Zealand dollar may trade in a range of 82.15 US cents to 82.70 cents today, he said.