The New Zealand dollar touched a fresh seven-year high against the yen after Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe called a snap election and said he would delay plans to hike sales tax to seek a mandate for economic reform after the country fell into recession.
The kiwi reached 93.22 yen, its highest since July 2007, and was trading at 92.75 yen at 8am in Wellington, from 92.52 yen at 5pm yesterday. The local currency gave up its gains against the US dollar, dropping about half a cent, after dairy product prices fell in the latest GlobalDairyTrade auction early this morning to the lowest level in more than five years, with the currency ending the overnight session little changed at 79.42 cents from 79.34 cents yesterday.
The Japanese currency weakened after prime minister Abe confirmed he would delay plans for an unpopular second hike in the consumption tax scheduled for October next year by 18 months and would dissolve the lower house of parliament on Nov. 21 to seek a mandate at the polls next month for his set of economic policies, known as Abenomics. The announcement came after data this week showed the Japanese economy has fallen into recession with two quarters of negative growth.
"Japan PM Abe confirmed he was to postpone the government's proposed sales-tax hike and was calling a snap election," Bank of New Zealand senior market strategist Kymberly Martin said in a note. "The Japanese yen suffered a bout of volatility on the announcement, although not unexpected by the market."