The New Zealand dollar rose as weaker data out of the US and comments by Federal Reserve nominee chair Janet Yellen increased bets the Fed won't pull back on its stimulus programme anytime soon.
The kiwi advanced to 83.45 US cents at 8am in Wellington, from 83.41 cents at the New York close and 82.90 cents at the 5pm market close in Wellington on Friday. The trade-weighted index increased to 77.94 from 77.54 on Friday.
The greenback weakened amid concern about the pace of revival in the world's largest economy after reports on October industrial production and the Empire Manufacturing index for November failed to meet expectations. That came after comments by Yellen at her confirmation hearing before the Senate Banking committee that the Fed will keep its US$85 billion a month stimulus programme intact until the US economy shows more strength and stability.
Yellen backs US Fed stimulus: