The New Zealand dollar fell around one US cent after a shock rise in the unemployment rate to 7.3 per cent in the December quarter.
The NZ dollar fell to a five month low of US69.60c from US70.80c just before the report. It was at US69.80c at 5pm from US71.06c at the same time yesterday.
The higher than expected increase in unemployment means interest rates may remain lower for longer, which makes the NZ dollar less attractive to investors.
"It was a huge shock to the market," said Imre Speizer, currency strategist at Westpac.
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) was expecting an unemployment rate of 6.6 per cent, while the market was expecting 6.8 per cent.
"It is an important input into the RBNZ's thinking on when it will start hiking rates and the consensus prior to the number was April. The probability of an April hike has diminished considerably and we are now looking at June," Mr Speizer said.
Yields in the swap market also fell in response to the data. The two-year swap rate fell by about 10 basis points to 4.27 per cent, dealers said.
The overnight index swap, which is an indicator of what the market thinks the official cash rate will be, also fell about 10 basis points.
Mr Speizer said the currency had strong support at US69.75c so the NZ dollar should hover around this level for a while.
"Unless you get some positive surprises from somewhere else in the world I think eventually we will break below this," he said.
- REUTERS reported that weakness in high yielding currencies like the NZ dollar helped keep the US dollar broadly steady in Asia today.
The NZ dollar eased to A79.26c by 5pm from A80.23c at 5pm yesterday. It was at 0.5028 euro from 0.5089 euro yesterday and to 63.44 yen from 64.21 yen.
The trade weighted index fell to 64.52 from 65.44.
- NZPA
Dollar plunges on shock unemployment data
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