"A decent US jobs report (after revisions) saw only a brief market response, the focus remaining on Tuesday's US election, the mood risk averse," Imre Speizer, senior market strategist at Westpac Banking Corp, said in a report. "Tuesday's election is shaping up to be a close race."
Traders are also looking ahead to the monetary policy statement on Thursday, where governor Graeme Wheeler is widely expected to cut the official cash rate a quarter point to 1.75 per cent. That may mark the low point in the easing cycle, as the bank's last projections were for inflation to return to the bottom end of its 1 per cent-to-3 per cent target range for annual inflation in the fourth quarter.
"Markets are now assuming the widely expected rate cut on 10 November will be the last in this cycle (barring an offshore-sourced shock)," Speizer said.
The local currency traded at 95.22 Australian cents, little changed from last week. The kiwi was at 4.9415 yuan, down from 4.9469 yuan in New York and 4.9456 yuan in Wellington last week. It fell to 58.44 British pence from 58.52 pence in New York on Friday and increased to 65.82 euro cents from 65.70 cents yesterday. It edged up to 75.61 yen from 75.54 yen last week.