"Markets remained in wait-and-see mode ahead of Trump's inaugural speech to Congress, although a mixed bag of US economic data did dent the USD, US interest rates and US equities slightly," said Imre Speizer, senior markets strategist at Westpac Banking Corp, in a note.
The kiwi dollar rose to 94.02 Australian cents from 93.47 cents late yesterday ahead of Australian fourth-quarter GDP today, which is expected to show that economy bounced back from a third-quarter contraction with growth of 0.7 per cent, for an annual expansion of 1.9 per cent.
Locally, traders may watch for fourth-quarter terms of trade this morning, while Quotable Value data showed New Zealand property values continued to rise at an unchanged annual pace in February as buyers sought out new areas of growth with some of the usual suspects cooling off in the month. The average value of a New Zealand home rose 13.5 percent to $631,349 in February from a year earlier, with values up 1.1 per cent on a rolling three-month basis, state-owned valuer Quotable Value said.
The kiwi rose to 58.11 British pence from 57.78 pence and gained to 68.03 euro cents from 67.84 cents. It was little changed at 80.87 yen from 80.90 yen and rose to 4.9535 yuan from 4.9341 yuan.