The New Zealand dollar rose as the $700 million sale of Griffin's Foods to a Philippines-based company stoked expectations of demand for the kiwi and as traders pondered the likely language the Reserve Bank will use if it hikes interest rates as expected on Thursday.
The local currency rose to 87.12 US cents at 5pm in Wellington from 86.85 cents at the start of the day and from 86.97 cents at the New York close on Friday. The trade-weighted index rose to 81.05 from 80.84 on Friday.
Australian private equity firm Pacific Equity Partners today said it will sell snack-food company Griffin's to Universal Robina Corp of the Philippines subject to regulatory approvals. The currency also got a lift after traders who had bet on a decline in risk appetite at the end of last week following the shooting down of a Malaysian passenger plane had to buy back their positions when reaction was smaller than expected.
The market is now awaiting the Reserve Bank's one-page statement on Thursday, which is expected to see a quarter point hike in the official cash rate to 3.5 percent and then potentially a pause in the tightening cycle.
"News of the PEP deal leaking into the market could've had some impact on the kiwi. Most of that $700 million will be kiwi dollars," said Michael Johnson, senior trader at HiFX.