The New Zealand dollar slipped from a four-month high as traders mulled a later start to Federal Reserve tapering of monetary stimulus and as the greenback clawed back some ground following better economic data yesterday.
The kiwi rose as high as 84.35 US cents overnight, and was trading at 83.74 cents at 8am in Wellington, from 83.88 cents at the 5pm market close yesterday. The trade-weighted index edged up to 77.97 from 77.86 yesterday.
The greenback recovered some ground following yesterday's slump when the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee unexpectedly chose to keep its US$85 billion a month stimulus programme unchanged this month as it awaits more data showing a revival in the world's largest economy. Better than expected US data on jobless claims, home sales and Philadelphia business activity helped arrest the greenback's decline.
"A smattering of upbeat US data did throw the US dollar something of a lifeline, following the hiding it took yesterday. As a result, most of the major currencies have dribbled off their post-FOMC highs."