The New Zealand dollar rose against the euro after Spain backtracked on its recapitalisation plan for the recently nationalised Bankia SA, stoking fears the nation may need a rescue package and sapping investors' appetite for the region's single currency.
The New Zealand dollar rose to 61.01 euro cents at 8am from 60.70 cents yesterday at 5pm. The kiwi was little changed at 76.21 US cents from 76.10 cents yesterday. The trade weighted index increased to 69.54 from 69.36.
The euro sank as much at 0.6 per cent, recently trading at US$1.2501, after Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy made a plea for his nation's ailing banks to tap the European Financial Stability Fund directly, backtracking on plans to saddle Bankia with government debt to shore up its books. The fragility of Spain's banking system has spooked investors, who fear it may lead to a deepening of Europe's sovereign debt crisis.
"The euro fell considerably lower overnight so that is a bit of a break for the kiwi," said Stuart Ive, currency strategist at HiFX. "The New Zealand dollar failed to break its resistance and is back in that channel of 75.70 US cents to 76.50 cents - we are bouncing around between world growth and the situation in Spain," he said.
Euro-zone consumer confidence figures due out today are expected to show the region's confidence fell 19.3 points in May, according to a Bloomberg survey.