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The Australian and New Zealand dollars hit fresh multi-month lows on Wednesday as the relative outperformance of the US economy sent its currency higher across the board. The Aussie dollar was huddled at $0.7435, having touched its lowest since last June at $0.7424. It has now shed almost four US cents in less than three weeks. The kiwi dollar was near its lowest since December at $0.6967, having again lost four cents since mid-April.
New Zealand government bonds slipped in line with US Treasuries, nudging yields up as much as 4 basis points. Australian government bond futures also eased, with the three-year bond contract off 2 ticks at 97.785. The 10-year contract fell 5 ticks to 97.1950. The US dollar has been on a tear as economic indicators there outpaced much of the rest of the advanced world, forcing a mass shake-out of short dollar positions - particularly against the euro and sterling.
That has also shaken confidence in a synchronous global recovery, sending funds toward US assets at the cost of emerging markets from Argentina to Turkey.
This trend has been doubly negative for the Aussie since many investors use the commodity-leveraged currency as a liquid proxy for global growth and emerging markets, selling it as a hedge when times are troubled.
Adding to the strain was President Donald Trump's decision to walk away from the nuclear deal with Iran, leaving investors uncertain as to what might happen next in the Middle East. All of which overshadowed an upbeat budget from Australia late on Tuesday which underlined the country's favourable debt background.

Copyright Reuters, 2018

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