The Australian dollar drifted lower on Wednesday following a downgrade in China's sovereign ratings and a weak domestic construction report, while its New Zealand counterpart held its ground after solid data at home. The Australian dollar eased to $0.7460, away from a three-week peak of $0.7517 set on Tuesday. It briefly dipped to $0.7455 after Moody's cut China's ratings to A1, from Aa3, citing rising debt amid a slowing economy. China is a key export market for Australia.
"The Aussie reaction is not necessarily a direct economic response, it's more a sentiment response," said Annette Beacher, chief macro strategist, FX and rates at TD Securities, adding that anything bad for China is seen as bad for Australia. Also undermining the Aussie was a 0.7 percent fall in domestic construction work done in the first quarter versus forecasts of a 0.2 percent decrease.
The slippage follows a surprisingly hefty 13.4 percent drop in building approvals in March. Support for the Aussie was seen at around $0.7449. Across the Tasman Sea, the New Zealand dollar held its ground after solid domestic data. It was steady at $0.7014, not far from a one-month high of $0.7050 the previous day. New Zealand posted a trade surplus of NZ$578 million ($405 million) in April, the largest monthly figure since 2015 thanks to dairy, wood and wine exports. Australian government bond futures were soft, with the three-year bond contract off 2 ticks at 98.240. The 10-year contract eased 4.5 ticks to 97.4800, while the 20-year contract was steady at 96.9005. The spread between Australian and US two-year government bonds shrunk to 31 basis points, its smallest level since 2001.
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