The Australian dollar paused after advancing for two straight days to stand near one-month highs on Wednesday, aided by a rally in iron ore and coal prices and broad declines in the US dollar after its strong gains over the last few months. The Australian dollar stood at $0.7361 after popping up to $0.7385, its highest since December 14. It is up 2.1 percent in January so far, having earlier notched three consecutive months of declines.
The New Zealand dollar held at $0.6985, after touching a four-week high of $0.7048 on Tuesday. The Kiwi has gained 0.7 percent so far this month. New Zealand government bonds gained, sending yields 2 basis points lower at the long end of the curve. Australian government bond futures eased, with the three-year bond contract down 1 tick at 97.99. The 10-year contract slipped 1.5 ticks to 97.2350.
The Aussie was helped by gains in iron ore and coking coal - the country's top export earners. Iron ore jumped 8 percent to its strongest in more than three weeks on Tuesday, with coking coal climbing nearly 8 percent. The US dollar was on the back foot against a basket of currencies as investors braced for Donald Trump's news conference later in the day - his first since winning the presidential election in November.
Since his upset victory, Wall Street has scaled record highs with US debt yields soaring to levels unseen since 2015, and the dollar index hitting a 14-year peak on expectations that Trump's policies would stoke inflation. Against that backdrop, financial markets are keen to see how Trump will follow through on campaign pledges. Elsewhere, the Aussie stood near three-week highs against the euro and at a two-month peak on the pound. It rose 0.6 percent against its antipodean neighbour to be near its highest in six weeks.
Published under arrangements with Reuters.
No content from Business Recorder shall be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcast or publication, or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium.
Business Recorder shall not be responsible or held liable for any error of fact, opinion or recommendation and also for any loss, financial or otherwise, resulting from business or trade or speculation conducted, or investments made, on the basis of the information posted here. Nor shall Business Recorder be held liable for any actions taken in consequence." >Copyright Reuters, 2017