Aussie, kiwi up

13 Oct, 2017

The Australian and New Zealand dollars rose on Thursday as the greenback stumbled to two-week lows after minutes of the US Federal Reserve meeting showed many officials expressed concerns that soft inflation might not be transitory. The worries about stubbornly weak consumer prices put a question mark over the pace of future rate increases in the world's biggest economy.
That led to some selling pressure in the dollar and sent its Australian counterpart to a one-week top of $0.7813. The Aussie has risen 0.5 percent so far this week, after four straight weekly losses. The New Zealand dollar climbed for a third straight session to a high of $0.7110, but was still within spitting distance of a more than four-month trough touched this week.
New Zealand government bonds were a touch firmer, sending yields about 1 basis points lower across the curve. Australian government bond futures were mostly unchanged, with the three-year bond contract flat at 97.840 and the 10-year contract down half a tick at 97.1500.
"Inglorious uncertainty has set in over the course of the Federal Reserve Board path to interest rate normalisation," said Stephen Innes, head of trading for Asia-Pacific at OANDA. "Given the uncertainties of Fed pricing and an arguably dovish FOMC minutes, it should underpin sentiment in the Australian Dollar."
The dollar index, which measures the greenback's value against a basket of six major currencies, slipped to as low as 92.839 on Thursday, its lowest since September 26. Investors will closely watch US producer price data on Thursday and consumer price figures on Friday, after the US jobs figures last week showed a rise in wages that boosted expectations that inflation is increasing.
The market is pricing in around a 77 percent chance of a US rate hike in December.

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