The New Zealand dollar rose from a five-year low as investors weighed up the outlook for the US economy and interest rate increases, and whether Greece will reach a compromise with its creditors and keep its place in the Eurozone.
The kiwi rose to 68.52 US cents from a low of 68.13 cents during the Northern Hemisphere session, and up from 68.50 cents yesterday. The trade-weighted index gained to 71.61 from 71.47 yesterday.
Stocks across Asia followed their European and US counterparts higher as investors considered mixed US economic data. Optimism that Greece will cut a deal with its international creditors took a knock after Germany said Greek parliamentary approval to an aid package was indispensable,amid reports of ructions on the hard left of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras's Syriza party government.
"The markets are trying to decide how much they believe those various narratives that were in the markets overnight," said Sam Tuck, senior FX strategist at ANZ Bank New Zealand in Auckland.
"The net result is that we've ended up reversing the moves we've seen (in the kiwi) overnight."