The New Zealand dollar rose to levels not seen since the February 22 earthquake hit Christchurch but was knocked back by news that business confidence has plunged since the earthquake.
The NZ dollar was at US75.82c at 5pm yesterday. It peaked at US76.37c about 6am, having climbed from US75.78c at 5pm Wednesday.
News that business confidence plunged in the March National Bank Business Outlook survey knocked the currency from just above US76c to below the figure.
"The risk that the trauma and disruption from the earthquake spilled over into broader nationwide confidence was one of the main reasons the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) cut the official cash rate by 50 basis points earlier this month," Philip Borkin at Goldman Sachs & Partners New Zealand said yesterday.
"Therefore, we feel the RBNZ will feel somewhat vindicated by today's weak confidence numbers.
"However, we emphasise that the weak numbers should not be interpreted as evidence for possibly more monetary policy stimulus. The RBNZ explicitly stated that its decision to cut was a pre-emptive move."
BNZ currency strategist Mike Jones said growth sensitive currencies, such as the NZ dollar, outperformed overnight as global investors continued to rediscover an appetite for risk. Labour market data in the United States impressed and there had been no further deterioration in the Japanese nuclear crisis or evidence of wider contagion from Portugal's recent debt woes, Mr Jones said.
The NZ dollar rose to its highest level against the Japanese currency since February 22. The Australian dollar climbed to a fresh 29-year high yesterday. NZPA
Dollar reaches post quake high but eases back again
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