Today, the Bank of Japan is due to release its monetary policy statement while the Bank of England publishes the minutes to its last meeting. In the early hours of tomorrow morning, all eyes will be on the release of the US Federal Reserve minutes.
The New Zealand dollar touched 91.47 Australian cents, its highest in almost two months, after Reserve Bank of Australia governor Glenn Stevens said at a dinner in Melbourne last night that he sees a "pretty material risk" the currency will fall further. Stevens also said he saw rates on hold for an extended period, he was more concerned about downside than upside risk to growth and that a lower currency would help balance growth. The kiwi gave up its gains against the Aussie following the weaker dairy auction to be unchanged at 90.94 Australian cents this morning.
The average winning price in Fonterra Cooperative Group's latest auction overnight slid 3.1 percent to US$2,561, the lowest level since August 2009 and down from US$2,649 two weeks ago. Some 39,613 tonnes of product was sold, down from 45,499 tonnes of product two weeks ago.
The AgriHQ Seasonal Farmgate Milk Price for the 2014-15 dairy season has decreased by 20 cents to $4.55 per kilogram milk solids following the GDT auction. This compares to Fonterra's current forecast for the season of $5.30/kgMS which is scheduled to be reviewed next month. Dairy products are New Zealand's largest export.
The local currency declined to 63.33 euro cents from 63.60 cents yesterday after a better than expected survey of German investor confidence. The ZEW Center for European Economic Research said investor confidence in Germany, Europe's biggest economy, climbed for the first time in 11 months, with the measure aiming to predict economic developments six months in advance rising to 11.5 in November from minus 3.6 in October.
The New Zealand dollar advanced to 50.80 British pence from 50.69 pence yesterday while the trade-weighted index weakened to 78.66 from 78.70.