The New Zealand dollar fell against the euro as the common currency climbed against most of its trading peers after Standard & Poor's upgraded Greece and Spain managed to sell all the debt it targeted in its last auction of the year.
The kiwi dollar fell to 63.62 euro cents from 64.07 cents at 5pm yesterday in Wellington. The local currency fell to 84.15 US cents from 84.42 cents.
The euro gained to a seven-month high against the greenback after S&P lifted its credit rating on Greece to B- from selective default with a stable outlook. Meantime, Spain drew solid demand in its latest debt auctions, selling three-month bills at an average yield of 1.195 per cent, down from 1.254 per cent at a previous auction on Nov. 27.
"It's been a good night for the euro" on the back of the Greek upgrade, said Tim Kelleher, head of institutional FX sales at ASB Institutional. "The kiwi has been struggling in the past couple of days, with a bit of profit taking on the crosses. It had probably gone too far, too fast."
The New Zealand dollar may trade in a range of 83.90 US cents to 84.30 cents today, he said.