The New Zealand dollar was little changed overnight after a weaker-than-expected US manufacturing gauge eroded and better-than-forecast Chinese industrial production data, as traders await US payrolls data which will feed into the Federal Reserve's interest rate review.
The kiwi was little changed at 63.97 US cents at 8am in Wellington from 64.08 cents late yesterday. The trade-weighted index traded at 69.75 from 69.82 yesterday.
The US Institute for Supply Management manufacturing index fell in September to 50.2, missing market expectations, and sapping investors' appetite for risk-sensitive assets, which had been bolstered by a better-than-expected Chinese manufacturing gauge yesterday. The manufacturing data comes ahead of the US non-farm payrolls report on Friday in Washington, which is expected to show the world's biggest economy added 201,000 jobs last month. Employment is a key component for the Fed when reviewing interest rates, and markets are undecided on whether the US central bank will start tightening policy this month or in December.
"In our session, positive China PMI readings boosted risk appetite and saw NZD break (above) 0.64 decisively," Bank of New Zealand currency strategist Raiko Shareef said in a note. "But a disappointing US ISM knocked markets back onto the defensive. We continue to look for NZD out-performance in the near-term, but are wary of souring risk sentiment."
Investors will be watching Australian consumer spending data today for direction during the Asian trading session ahead of the US payrolls report. The kiwi traded at 90.97 Australian cents from 90.87 cents yesterday.