NZD/USD Transfer

Risk assets this week have dragged on the New Zealand Dollar (NZD) the currency falling back to 0.6115 against the US Dollar (USD) on renewed greenback demand. Central banks around the globe are starting to talk more about easing policy and dropping rates sooner rather than later. The recent rhetoric around “higher for longer” is now being questioned with the first rate cut now predicted by the RBNZ by August 2024. Non-Farm Payroll prints tonight expected to come in light with unemployment to tick higher from 3.9%. Technically the kiwi looks well capped at 0.6220 and should continue to the downside. A December close below 0.6050 should signal further bearish price moves.

The current interbank midrate is: NZDUSD 0.6162

The interbank range this week has been: NZDUSD 0.6113- 0.6222

NZD/AUD Transfer

The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) extended moves north into Friday against the Australian Dollar (AUD) clocking 0.9390 (1.0650) an 8-week high. The RBA left rates unchanged at 4.35% Tuesday as widely predicted after the central bank hiked in November. New governor Michelle Bullock saying progress to bring down inflation to their target 2-3% band has been slower than forecast. The RBA have no meeting planned in January; we would not expect a further hike at February’s meeting if 4th quarter inflation prints considerably lower than the current 5.4% in late January. Prices in the pair are back around the 0.9345 (1.0700) zone with a little Aussie support in play.

The current interbank midrate is: NZDAUD 0.9339 AUDNZD 1.0699

The interbank range this week has been: NZDAUD 0.9287- 0.9384 AUDNZD 1.0656- 1.0767

NZD/GBP Transfer

The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) has extended moves higher against the British Pound (GBP) Monday reaching 0.4900 (2.0400) before drifting back to 0.4885 (2.0470) this morning. UK house prices rose further than expected while UK manufacturing also came in hot, both strengthening the Pound for short periods. Governor Bailey speaks Thursday. On the chart the kiwi eyes 0.4930 (2.0285) the high of early October, the kiwi should be well supported on dips in the run up.

 

The current interbank midrate is: NZDGBP 0.4877 GBPNZD 2.0504

The interbank range this week has been: NZDGBP 0.4874- 0.4904 GBPNZD 2.0388- 2.0515

AUD/USD Transfer

The Australian Dollar (AUD) rallied late Friday against the US Dollar (USD) reaching 0.6670 areas as risk markets continued to dominate moves based on impressive equities and metal prices. The surge to early August highs hasn’t lasted however with US Manufacturing contracting in November coming in at 46.7% worse than market expectations of 47.6% bringing back the AUD to Tuesday. Today’s RBA cash rate will remain unchanged at 4.35% but may signal ongoing attention to stubborn inflation, PMI and Retail Sales data. 3rd quarter data and inflation will be key to February’s policy meeting. Non-Farm Payroll prints Friday and is expected to reflect a rise to unemployment numbers.

The current interbank midrate is: AUDUSD 0.6620

The interbank range this week has been: AUDUSD 0.6603- 0.6690

AUD/GBP Transfer

The Australian Dollar (AUD), British Pound (GBP) sits deep within recent ranges into Tuesday, falling back to 0.5240 (1.9080) off the open as markets await today’s RBA cash rate release. The Reserve Bank of Australia will keep their cash rate on hold later today at 4.35% with Governor Bullock remaining on alert about lingering inflation. She said recently these problems are localised not global. With recent PMI data showing a slowdown in the economy this should be reflected in the 3rd quarter data and 4th quarter CPI. We expect the Aussie to drift lower over the week.

The current interbank midrate is: AUDGBP 0.5240 GBPAUD 1.9083

The interbank range this week has been: AUDGBP 0.5238- 0.5271 GBPAUD 1.8971- 1.9090

NZD/USD Transfer

The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) reached the lofty heights of 0.6210 to close out the week against the US Dollar (USD) the highest it’s been since late July. It’s been an incredible run through 0.6000 recently in a perfect storm with massive flows back into the kiwi. A hawkish RBNZ last week helped when the central bank signalled they would keep interest rates higher for a longer period. ANZ consumer confidence rose 3.8 points in November to 91.9- the highest level since January 2022. We have no local data publishing on this week’s docket, just US Non-Farm Payroll Friday, expected to come in poor with unemployment rising from 3.9%. The kiwi could be a little overbought- we see the NZD drifting lower over the coming days.

The current interbank midrate is: NZDUSD 0.6161

The interbank range this week has been: NZDUSD 0.6149- 0.6221

NZD/AUD Transfer

The Australian Dollar (AUD) retreated Monday off 1.0760 (0.9295) to 1.0730 (0.9320) early Tuesday as we head into RBA week. The kiwi has been doing well of late post last week’s RBNZ hawkish hold. We don’t expect a hike from the RBA today from 4.35% after the central bank raised it in November. The Aussie could come under selling pressure this week depending on the market mood. A break past 0.9340 (1.0710) and we could see further upside in the NZD, possibly a retest of the long-term mark at 0.9400.

The current interbank midrate is: NZDAUD 0.9307 AUDNZD 1.0736

The interbank range this week has been: NZDAUD 0.9289- 0.9335 AUDNZD 1.0712- 1.0765

EURO/AUD Transfer

The AUD remains in inflationary conditions as does the GBP, but the interest rate differential favours the Pound. The UK has experienced amongst the highest inflations levels in Europe and is well advanced in the rising interest rate environment. Although the differential favours the GBP, they may be reaching the end of the cycle and the Bank of England may choose to maintain at high levels, rather than raise rates again. The RBA has indicated that they may support further rate rises and this may be a short-term support for the AUD.

Current Level: 1.6440
Resistance: 1.6800
Support: 1.6300
Last Weeks Range: 1.6453 – 1.6665

AUD/EURO Transfer

Recessionary conditions across Europe are having the desired effect on inflation and the ECB may now look to halt interest rate rises. The ECB and Bank of England are clearly at the end of their monetary policy tightening cycle, while Australian inflationary conditions persist. These monetary and economic conditions may work in the favour of the AUD, for the short-term, but long-term pain is on the horizon. Fiscal largesse remains an issue across the West, with deficit and debt a root cause of inflation.

Current Level: 0.6047
Resistance: 0.6080
Support: 0.6020
Last Weeks Range: 0.6021 – 0.6077

GBP/AUD Transfer

The AUD remains in inflationary conditions as does the GBP, but the interest rate differential favours the Pound. The UK has experienced amongst the highest inflations levels in Europe and is well advanced in the rising interest rate environment. Although the differential favours the GBP, they may be reaching the end of the cycle and the Bank of England may choose to maintain at high levels, rather than raise rates again. The RBA has indicated that they may support further rate rises and this may be a short-term support for the AUD.

Current Level: 1.9080
Resistance: 1.9300
Support: 1.9000
Last Weeks Range: 1.9030 – 1.9185