"Global markets have refocused on the global growth story as weak China, Europe and US manufacturing sectors weigh on sentiment."
Federal Reserve policymakers downgraded the US economy's growth expectations yesterday, extending the Operation Twist programme. The Fed will sell short-dated government debt to buy longer maturities, rather than embark on a third round of quantitative easing.
The New Zealand dollar fell to 62.65 euro cents from 62.87 cents yesterday on speculation rating agency, Moody's Investors Service will downgrade as many as 17 banks in Europe, the US and the UK.
Markets will be keeping an eye on the finance ministers' meeting in Luxembourg after Greece's New Democracy and Pasok parties stitched up a coalition government.
New Zealand's international travel and migration figures for May are set for release by Statistics New Zealand this morning. That comes after Government data yesterday showed the local economy grew at its fastest quarterly pace in five years in the first quarter, over twice than what the market was expecting.
The New Zealand dollar rose to above 80 US cents for the time since May 4, straight after the announcement.
The New Zealand dollar was little changed on 78.28 Australian cents from 78.24 cents.
The kiwi dropped to 50.37 British pence from 50.82 pence. It slipped to 63.10 from 63.42 yen.