German Chancellor Angela Merkel has rejected calls to investigate joint debt or do more to cut Spanish and Italian borrowing costs. Instead she remains focused on creating measures to boost economic growth.
Merkel's mood wasn't helped by data showing Germany's jobless rate climbed more than expected in June, rising for the fourth month in a row. Another indicator that Europe's largest economic engine is starting to slow.
The kiwi fell to 63.24 euro cents from 63.52 cents overnight.
In the world's largest economy, the US, gross domestic product rose at a 1.9 per cent annual rate in the first quarter, the Commerce Department said. The pace of expansion, unchanged from a prior reading, was well below the 3 per cent increase in the fourth quarter. Motor vehicle output accounted for more than half of this quarter's advance.
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand's monetary and credit aggregates and Building consents for May from Statistics New Zealand are set for release today.
The New Zealand dollar fell to 78.41 Australian cents at 8am from 78.57 cents at 5pm yesterday. The kiwi decreased to 50.79 British pence from 50.99 pence. It increased to 62.56 yen from 63.15 yen.