The Australian and New Zealand dollars popped higher on Monday as a rebound in equity markets restored risk appetite, though sentiment was still jittery ahead of US inflation data. The Australian dollar was last up 0.3 percent at $0.7834, after falling as deep as $0.7759 on Friday which was the lowest since late December.
The Aussie has slipped in eight of the last 10 sessions amid a financial market rout which saw a rapid flight to safer assets such as the yen and cash. The Aussie and its New Zealand cousin are favoured liquid hedging proxies during times of financial stress.
The New Zealand dollar edged up 0.2 percent to $0.7270, well above a one-month trough of $0.7176 made on Thursday. The kiwi fell 0.6 percent last week for its second consecutive weekly loss. New Zealand government bonds eased, sending yields 1.5 basis points higher at the long end of the curve. Australian government bond futures slipped, with the three-year bond contract down 2.5 ticks at 97.845. The 10-year contract dipped 5 ticks to 97.0950.
"The Aussie remained heavy last week amid heightened risk aversion, and it is likely to remain vulnerable to broader economic sentiment over the coming sessions too," ANZ analyst Tom Kenny said in a note to clients. "This week is all about CPI in the United States, with a stronger-than-expected print likely to re-ignite the sell-off."
Median forecasts are for consumer price inflation, due Wednesday, to slow a little to 1.9 percent in January, mainly due to the base effect of a high reading last year dropping out of the calculation. The core measure is seen ticking down to 1.7 percent. A result in line with or below expectations would likely be a big relief, while anything higher could well spook investors, lift bond yields and batter stocks.


















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