New Zealand manufacturing exporters are facing record headwinds from the kiwi's strength against the Australian dollar, with foreign exchange traders and strategists almost evenly split on whether the currencies will reach parity.
The New Zealand dollar touched a post-float record of 96.77 Australian cents overnight and recently traded at 96.53 cents. Six of 13 strategists and advisers in a BusinessDesk survey today say the kiwi dollar will reach A$1 this year. The options market is pricing in a 56 per cent chance of parity, according to Bloomberg data.
The kiwi has gained about 9 per cent against the Australian dollar since the start of the fourth quarter last year, making New Zealand products less competitive across the Tasman and reducing the value of sales when they are repatriated from the nation's second-largest market. Exports to Australia dropped almost 4 per cent in the fourth quarter, government figures show.
The New Zealand economy is on a stronger path than Australia's and the gap may widen amid signs dairy product prices are recovering while hard commodities such as iron ore and coal remain weak. A gap of 125 basis points in New Zealand's favour has opened up between central bank benchmark interest rates and traders are betting Australia could cut rates again.
"Australia is a mine and New Zealand is a farm," said Fergus McDonald, who helps manage about $2.5 billion as head of bonds and currency at Nikko Asset Management NZ. "Economically speaking, New Zealand is on a better trajectory than Australia at the moment and our interest rates are probably going to be higher for quite some time, so that does support a little bit further strength in the kiwi."