Print Print edition: 2017-03-18

Aussie, kiwi steady

Published March 18, 2017 Updated March 18, 2017 12:00am

The Australian and New Zealand dollars were sidelined on Friday, but were on track for large weekly gains as the greenback lost steam after the Federal Reserve indicated it was unlikely to speed up monetary tightening. The Australian dollar held steady at $0.7675, within sight of a three-week peak of $0.7720 touched on Wednesday.
Since August, it tried around two dozen times to take a wall a resistance between $0.7707 and $0.7778.
Much of the recent strength came on broad US dollar selling after the Fed signalled fewer interest rate hikes than some investors had expected. Also underpinning were rising commodity prices and optimism about China's economy. All of which has sent the Aussie 1.7 percent higher since Monday and if sustained, it would be the first such gain after five weeks of losses.
For the year, the Aussie has risen more than four cents. It was also holding large gains versus its Kiwi neighbour at NZ$1.0982, having popped above NZ$1.1000 for the first time since April last year. The New Zealand dollar edged up to $0.6989, from $0.6974 in early trade and away from a peak of $0.7050 touched on Wednesday. It lost a bit of ground on Thursday after data showed the domestic economy grew 0.4 percent in October-December, from the previous quarter, versus a 0.7 percent forecast. For the week, the kiwi was 0.9 percent higher, following two weeks of losses. New Zealand government bonds eased, sending yields 2.5 basis points higher.
Australian government bond futures dipped, with the three-year bond contract off 2 ticks at 97.920. The 10-year contract fell 5 ticks to 97.0900, while the 20-year contract was steady at 96.5600. The premium between Australian and US 2-year government bonds dropped to 50 basis points, the lowest in more than a decade.