The Australian and New Zealand dollars were on track for a second consecutive week of gains against the greenback but their advances were limited by a rally in bonds that sent yields to multi-year lows. The Australian dollar was up 0.2 percent so far this week, trading in a very tight band between $0.7057 and $0.7168. The currency jumped to near three-week highs on Thursday after official figures showed the country's labour market was going strong but the gains were not sustained.
On Friday, the Aussie was down 0.1 percent at $0.7104. The New Zealand dollar has done better this week, rising 0.7 percent helped by data showing the country's economy expanded rapidly last quarter. It was up 0.2 percent on Friday at $0.6887.
Bonds have rallied hard in the last couple of weeks amid soft economic data globally and strong investor demand. Yields on Australian three-year notes have dived 29 basis points since the start of March to hit 1.432 percent, below the cash rate and the lowest since late 2016. The 10-year bond futures contract has surged about 39 ticks to 98.1650 in almost three weeks, taking it nearer to the all-time peak of 98.2000.