The New Zealand dollar tumbled 1 US cent after Moody's Investors Service said it will review European Union nation's ratings in the wake of the region's inconclusive debt summit.
The kiwi fell to 76.23 US cents at 8am, from 77.19 cents at 5pm. The trade-weighted index declined to 68.04 from 68.48.
Investors eschewed riskier assets for the relatively safety of the greenback and the yen after Moody's said the agreement of EU leaders to closer fiscal cooperation and an enlarged bailout fund doesn't diminish the risk of credit-ranking revisions. "Our intention as announced in November is to revisit the level and dispersion of ratings during the first quarter of 2012," the ratings company said.
"The lukewarm reaction to Friday's EU plan turned cold overnight," said Mike Burrowes, currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand." This saw 'safe haven' demand for the USD and JPY, while the AUD and NZD were among the weakest performers."
S&P said the AAA long term ratings of Europe's biggest economies and the ranking of some of the region's largest banks including, BNP Paribas SA, Commerzbank AG and Deutsche Bank AG could be lowered.