NZDUSD 0.6741 -0.2%
NZDEUR 0.5952 0.1%
NZDGBP 0.5209 0.0%
NZDJPY 73.92 -0.4%
NZDAUD 0.9511 -0.1%
NZDCAD 0.8941 -0.5%
GBPNZD 1.9198 0.0%
The NZDUSD opens at 0.6741 (mid-rate) this morning.
Safe-haven currencies outperformed last week with investors concerned about the lack of progress in the China-US trade
negotiations and slowing global growth.
On Friday President Donald Trump told reporters he will not meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping before a crucial
March deadline when tariffs on Chinese goods are set to increase automatically. Trumps comments came after White House
economic adviser Larry Kudlow told reporters that the US and China have a "pretty sizable distance to go" before
reaching a trade deal.
Over the course of week the Bank of England, European Central Bank and the Reserve Bank of Australia all cut their
growth forecasts for 2019, with the Reserve Bank of New Zealand like to follow suit at Wednesday afternoon’s meeting.
The CAD spiked higher on Friday after data from Statistics Canada showed that the employment surged by 66.8k jobs in
January following an increase of 9,300 jobs in December. The result was well ahead of economists’ forecasts of a 5k
increase in jobs.
Direction for the NZD will be dictated by Wednesday’s RBNZ monetary policy statement with inflation expectations and a
press conference following shortly after. On the international front the UK GDP report for Q4 is due to be released
tonight while the US monthly inflation and retail sales reports are due for release in the second half of the week.
Global equity market closed out the week mixed, - Dow -0.25%, S 500 +0.06%, FTSE -0.26%, DAX -1.05%, CAC -0.48%, Nikkei -2.01%, Shanghai Closed.
Gold prices were unchanged on Friday, closing out the week at $1,313 an ounce. WTI Crude Oil prices pushed higher on
Friday rising 1.7% closing at $53.09 a barrel.
ends