The New Zealand dollar rose to a four-month high against the euro on speculation the European Central Bank may ease monetary policy further, contrasting with New Zealand where interest rates are increasing.
The kiwi touched 62.20 euro cents this morning, and was trading at 61.99 cents at 8am from 61.82 cents at 5pm yesterday. The local currency advanced to 85.73 US cents from 85.51 cents as a weaker Richmond Fed manufacturing report suggested activity in the world's largest economy may not pick up till April, denting demand for the greenback.
The 18-nation European common currency weakened after ECB policymakers signalled the central bank stood ready to take further stimulatory measures to support the region's economic recovery and stem a surging euro. That contrasts with the New Zealand Reserve Bank which is tightening monetary policy on concern about accelerating inflation.
"They said basically don't count the ECB out, negative deposit rates are still possible and unconventional measures are still on the table, we stand prepared to act, which essentially drove euro weakness," said ANZ Bank senior FX strategist Sam Tuck. "The RBNZ and the New Zealand domestic data does not indicate any deviation from being in a completely opposite camp from the ECB."
ANZ expects the kiwi to trade between 61.80 euro cents and 62.40 cents today.