Some 21 of 24 economists polled by Reuters expect the Reserve Bank to cut the benchmark rate by a quarter point to 2.5 percent. Traders have increased their bets for a quarter point cut to 78 percent, from 68 percent at the start of the week, according to Thomson Reuters data.
"Tomorrow is the RBNZ meeting with most market participants anticipating a rate cut, but the most recent data from New Zealand has been surprisingly strong," said BK's Schlossberg. "Therefore there is a small, but very real chance that the RBNZ may choose to hold rates steady, which would provide the kiwi with an even bigger lift as it will remain the predominant carry trade in the advanced industrialised world."
The kiwi edged up to 4.2571 yuan from 4.2561 yuan yesterday. Today, traders will be eyeing Chinese November inflation and producer prices data after trade data for the month released yesterday showed exports fell 6.8 percent from a year earlier while imports tumbled 8.7 percent. China, the world's second-largest economy, is New Zealand's largest trading partner.
The New Zealand dollar advanced to 91.99 Australian cents, from 91.60 cents yesterday ahead of an Australian consumer confidence survey due out today.
The local currency slipped to 60.89 euro cents from 61.13 cents yesterday, advanced to 44.20 British pence from 44.09 pence, and edged lower to 81.56 yen from 81.67 yen
(BusinessDesk)