The New Zealand dollar is little changed despite an attempt to push it down following poor manufacturing data.
The kiwi was trading at US64.43c at 5pm yesterday, from US64.49c at 7:45am, after falling as low as US64.26c early in the afternoon. The trade-weighted index was at 71.63 points from 71.72.
The Bank of New Zealand-BusinessNZ July Performance of Manufacturing Index fell 2.9 points to 48.2, the first time manufacturing activity has contracted in seven years.
"Currency markets are not where the story is at the moment. It's all in equities and interest rates," said Peter Cavanaugh, senior client adviser at Bancorp Treasury Services.
"For some time, bond markets and stock markets have been telling conflicting stories. This week, stock markets capitulated and bond markets have started yelling." In the US, two-year bonds are now yielding more than 10-year bonds. Should that inversion be sustained, that would be a classic indicator that a recession is likely.