The New Zealand dollar rose to a six-week high against the euro ahead of a European Central Bank meeting that may see hints of a move to more normal monetary policy. It rose against the greenback as testimony from former FBI Director James Comey was published.
The kiwi rose to 63.84 euro cents as at 8am in Wellington, and earlier touched 64.22 cents, the highest since late April, from 63.68 cents late yesterday. It rose to 71.93 US cents from 71.69 cents.
Economists are divided on whether the ECB will signal an end to its period of extraordinarily accommodative monetary policy and how the region's central bank would manage that without driving up the euro.
Meanwhile, in the US, Comey's written testimony accuses US President Donald Trump of asking him to drop an investigation into his former national security adviser Michael Flynn, part of a wider probe into alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 election. Markets are concerned a loss of suport for Trump may derail his economy-boosting policy plans.
Traders are nervous ahead of the ECB meeting, "which will represent a turning point in the bank's policy guidance, with growth risks likely to be raised to balanced from negative," said Jason Wong, currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand.