The New Zealand dollar touched its highest in four-and-a-half years against the Aussie this morning after the Reserve Bank of Australia governor Glenn Stevens yesterday suggested a decision on whether to hold interest rates this week was a close call.
The kiwi touched 85.80 Australian cents today, its highest since November 2008. The local currency recently traded at 85.62 Australian cents, up from 84.96 at the 5 pm market close in Wellington yesterday. The kiwi advanced to 77.77 US cents from 77.41 yesterday.
The Australian dollar fell after Stevens said the board "deliberated for a very long time" before holding its key interest rate unchanged at 2.75 per cent. Australian interest rates are expected to fall as the mining boom has peaked and concerns mount about slowing growth in China, the country's largest trading partner. By comparison, New Zealand interest rates are expected to rise from their record low 2.5 per cent as the rebuild of Christchurch and a shortage of properties in Auckland spur inflation.
"We are quite surprised by the rapidity of the move, but not the direction. The kiwi economy is doing well, the Aussie economy not so well," said Sam Tuck, senior manager FX at ANZ New Zealand. "The market had only been pricing in a 16 per cent to 18 per cent chance of a rate cut so they were quite taken by surprise that it was a close decision."
Stevens, speaking in Brisbane where the board had met the previous day, said if the economy needs a lower exchange rate, it will probably get it.