The New Zealand dollar fell against the euro after the European Central Bank lifted its forecast for economic growth and didn't signal any alarm about the euro's 15 per cent gain against the greenback this year.
The kiwi was trading at 60.16 euro cents as at 8am in Wellington from 60.39 cents late yesterday. It was at 72.33 US cents from 72.02 cents.
The ECB said it is still waiting for evidence of a revival in inflation and did touch on the euro but only to refer to its volatility rather than its strength while President Mario Draghi said financial conditions in the eurozone were still broadly supportive.
The kiwi fell late yesterday against the euro and the greenback after the latest Colmar Brunton poll showed National down 2 points to 39 per cent and Labour unchanged on 43 per cent, while Labour's Jacinda Adern leads National's Bill English as preferred prime minister by 34 per cent to 33 per cent.
The euro's gains "may be linked to the ECB's more upbeat economic outlook and the fact that EUR-strength only had a small negative impact on the bank's inflation forecasts," said Jason Wong, currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand, in a note.