The New Zealand dollar soared to a five-week high and is edging toward 87 US cents, after the Reserve Bank yesterday raised the benchmark interest for a third time this year and signalled plans for further hikes were intact, increasing the lure of the nation's currency.
The kiwi touched 86.99 US cents this morning, and was trading at 86.82 cents at 8am in Wellington, from 86.50 cents at 5pm yesterday and 85.50 cents before the Reserve Bank announcement at 9am yesterday. The trade-weighted index gained to 80.83 from 80.70 yesterday.
Investors have pushed up the value of the New Zealand dollar after gaining comfort from yesterday's monetary policy statement that interest rate rises would continue as the Reserve Bank indicated in its previous statement in March. Some had bet that governor Graeme Wheeler could soften the pace of his tightening cycle on concern about the effect of lower milk prices on economic growth. Higher interest rates in New Zealand are attractive to investors in an environment where many other major central banks are on a neutral or easing path.
"The New Zealand dollar was the outstanding performer," Kymberly Martin, senior market strategist at Bank of New Zealand, said in a note. " The market was clearly taken by surprise that the RBNZ did not soften its previous stance."
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