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NZ dollar gains after Fonterra dairy auction eases fears

NZ dollar recovers ground after dairy auction as fears recede over Fonterra exports, payouts

By Tina Morrison

Aug 7 (BusinessDesk) – The New Zealand dollar recovered more ground as fears of weaker exports and lower payouts to farmers receded following a food contamination scare at Fonterra Cooperative Group, the nation’s largest company.

The kiwi rose to 78.98 US cents at 8am in Wellington from 78.51 cents at the 5pm market close. The trade-weighted index advanced to 74.67 from 74.37 yesterday.

The kiwi this morning rose above 79 US cents, returning to the levels it traded at before Fonterra said on Saturday it had found bacteria which can cause botulism in some of its dairy products. Traders eyeing Fonterra’s regular GlobalDairyTrade auction this morning said the 2.4 percent modest fall in prices was well within normal volatility, suggesting the food contamination scare won’t weigh too heavily on milk prices for farmers.

“The kiwi has been the strongest performing currency overnight, most of it is driven off receding fears about New Zealand dairy exporters,” said Mike Jones, currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand. “We saw a positive dairy auction this morning and that has further restored confidence in New Zealand dairy and the kiwi dollar has crept higher as a result.”

Fears of the potential impact on New Zealand exports saw the local currency weaken on Monday to a month low of 76.99 US cents.

“The dairy story has been the main one buffeting the kiwi this week,” BNZ’s Jones said. ”It’s that dairy auction this morning that has provided the juice for the rally in the kiwi.”

Looking ahead today, traders will be eyeing jobs data at 10:45am for signs of how the local economy is tracking. A decline in the first quarter unemployment rate close to 6 percent would probably further underpin the kiwi, said BNZ’s Jones.

BNZ expects the unemployment rate to have ticked down to 6.1 percent from 6.2 percent, while economists in a Reuters poll picked 6.3 percent.

“These job numbers are one of the bigger movers on the local scene for the currency,” Jones said. “They can be very volatile and hence illicit big reactions.”

The kiwi advanced to 87.86 Australian cents at 8am in Wellington from 87.47 cents at the 5pm market close after the Reserve Bank of Australia yesterday cut its benchmark interest rate a quarter point to 2.5 percent to help stoke a slowing economy. The move highlighted the divergent economies after New Zealand central bank governor Graeme Wheeler indicated the next move in local rates is up.

Reserve Bank of Australia assistant governor (financial markets) Guy Debelle is speaking as part of a panel today at the Funding Australia’s Future Forum in Sydney. That is unlikely to focus on policy, and Friday’s Statement on Monetary Policy with its formal forecasts on growth and inflation is the next key event, said BNZ’s Jones.

The New Zealand dollar edged up to 77.17 yen from 77.11 yen yesterday and rose to 59.33 euro cents from 59.18 cents. The local currency advanced to 51.45 British pence from 51.13 pence.

(BusinessDesk)

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