Tuesday 27th April 2010 |
Text too small? |
The New Zealand dollar climbed to a three-month high against the greenback amid speculation Fonterra Cooperative Group will raise its forecast pay-out to dairy farmers.
The board of the world’s largest dairy exporter meet today and investors are picking the company will raise its forecast pay-out after the price of whole milk powder surged to its highest level since July 2008 on Fonterra’s online trading platform. This month the average price for whole milk powder jumped 21% to US$3,969 a tonne from March, according to the globalDairyTrade website. The auction price is fast becoming a de facto market price, based on recent data from NZX’s Agrifax service.
The kiwi climbed above 72 US cents for the first time since September as investors prepare for the Reserve Bank’s review the official cash rate on Thursday, which will give a clue as to when Governor Alan Bollard will begin hiking rates.
“Agrifax (dairy) prices have moved to the auction price – that auction price has held” and is now an indication of where world prices are, said Imre Speizer, markets strategist at Westpac Banking Corp. If Fonterra’s board doesn’t announce an increased forecast “that would definitely cause a pull-back, possibly below 72 US cents, but I can’t see them doing that.”
The kiwi gained to 72.22 US cents from 71.90 cents yesterday, and rose to 67.23 on the trade-weighted index, or TWI, a measure of the currency against a basket of five trading partner, from 66.99. It climbed to 67.89 yen from 67.67 yen yesterday, and was up to 77.91 Australian cents from 77.40 cents. It was little changed near a new 26-month high at 54.02 euro cents from 54.04 cents yesterday, and increased to 46.72 pence from 46.55 pence.
Speizer said the currency may trade between 72 US cents and 73 cents today, though there are “no technical levels before 74 cents.” He predicts the kiwi will continue to outperform on the crosses, and will rise to a range of between 74 cents and 76 cents in the next few weeks.
Greece’s fiscal woes stayed in the headlines after German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the Mediterranean nation will have to commit to new savings measures before Europe’s largest economy will help. Greek 10-year bonds widened to a new record of 650 basis points above German bunds.
Businesswire.co.nz
No comments yet
NZ dollar gains on G20 preference for growth
NZ dollar dips as Wellington CBD checked for quake damage
NZ dollar gains, bolstered by RBA minutes, strong dairy prices
NZ dollar falls after central bank says it may scale up currency intervention
NZ dollar gains before CPI, helped by dairy gains, rally on Wall Street
NZ dollar trades little changed as US budget talks bear down on deadline
NZ dollar falls with equities on view US to sail over fiscal cliff
NZ dollar weakens as fiscal cliff looms, long bets unwind
NZ dollar sinks to three-week low as equities fall, fiscal talks in focus
NZ dollar slips as fiscal cliff talks grind slower in Washington