The New Zealand dollar held at lower levels overnight as traders priced in an increased chance of an interest rate cut after a report yesterday showed wage growth slowed in the March quarter.
The trade-weighted index, a broad measure of the kiwi favoured by the Reserve Bank, was at 77.26 at 8am in Wellington, from 77.16 at 5pm yesterday and 78.02 immediately before the employment data was released at 10:45am yesterday.
The local currency was at 75.05 US cents from 74.82 cents yesterday and 75.45 cents before the employment data.
The kiwi dropped yesterday after government data showed annual wage inflation in the private sector slowed to a 0.3 per cent pace in the three months ended March 31 and was unchanged on an annual basis at a 1.8 per cent rate, lagging behind expectations for wages to increase at a faster pace.
That prompted traders to price in a 28 per cent chance the Reserve Bank will cut rates at its next meeting, and bet the benchmark will be cut by 38 basis points over the coming year, according to the Overnight Index Swap Curve.