"Canada's employment report had more impact on the market, with strong employment growth cementing in expectations for a hike this week," said Jason Wong, currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand. "The OIS market prices in a 95 per cent chance of a 25 basis points hike to 0.75 per cent, which would officially make the Bank of Canada the second major central bank to kick off a tightening cycle."
Wong said the US non-farm payrolls report "was seen to encourage the Fed to continue along its guided path of policy normalisation, which saw yields nudge higher." The Federal Reserve has a third rate hike projected for 2017.
Globally, interest rates continued to rise and in New Zealand, the 10-year swap rate at 3.41 per cent, is sitting at about its highest level since early May.
America's isolation over climate change was a feature of the Group of 20 meeting in Hamburg over the weekend, with anti-globalisation protestors gaining as much publicity outside the venue.
The trade-weighted index was little changed at 78.29.
The local currency fell to 95.58 Australian cents from 95.75 cents in New York on Friday and declined to 4.9464 yuan from 4.9512 yuan. It traded at 56.41 pence from 56.44 pence on Friday and traded at 82.78 yen from 82.85 yen. It dropped to 63.77 euro cents from 63.85 cents.