The New Zealand dollar rose against the pound as the British Conservative Party conference gets underway with deep divisions over Brexit and after weaker-than-expected manufacturing data.
The kiwi gained to 54.22 British pence as at 8am in Wellington from 53.81 pence late yesterday. It increased to 72.02 US cents from 71.96 cents yesterday.
The UK's Markit PMI for manufacturing printed at 55.9 in September, missing estimates for 56.2 contributing to a slide in the pound. At the Conservative Party conference Prime Minister Theresa May is reportedly fighting for her survival amid reports Foreign Minister Boris Johnson is ambitious for the top job, having criticised May's Brexit strategy.
In the US, the ISM manufacturing survey was stronger than expected.
"For currencies, it appears that political developments have dominated. The worst performing currency is GBP," said Jason Wong, currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand, in a note. "GBP was well down even before the softer PMI data were released."