The New Zealand dollar rose overnight against a broadly weaker greenback after soft US labour market data reduced expectations the Federal Reserve will rush to raise interest rates.
The kiwi rose to 64.59 US cents as at 8am in Wellington, from 64.36 cents in late New York trading on Friday and from 63.90 cents in Wellington at the end of last week. The trade-weighted index rose to 70.30 from 70.16 in New York and 69.73 in Wellington on Friday.
The US added 142,00 jobs last month, Labor Department figures showed, compared with expectations of 201,000 jobs, while figures for August and July were revised down and the unemployment rate held unchanged at 5.1 percent.
Employment is a key measure for the Fed, which aims to normalise monetary policy after cutting the Federal Funds rate to near zero in December 2008 in response to the global financial crisis. The Fed is preparing to raises rates as traders put 78 percent odds on the Reserve Bank of New Zealand cutting the official cash rate a quarter point to 2.5 percent on Oct. 29.
The US jobs report "was disappointing in its headline and its detail," said Kymberly Martin, a strategist at Bank of New Zealand. "An October Fed hike how appears well off the cards, and even our core view of a hike in December appears shaky."