The New Zealand dollar (sign: $; code: NZD) is the currency of New Zealand. It also circulates in the Cook Islands (see also Cook Islands dollar), Niue, Tokelau, and the Pitcairn Islands. It is divided into 100 cents.It is normally written with the dollar sign $, or NZ$ to distinguish it from other dollar-denominated currencies. It is often informally known as the "Kiwi (dollar)", kiwi typically being associated with New Zealand, and the $1 coin depicts a kiwi. It is one of the 12 most-traded currencies in the world.

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Wednesday, April 8, 2009

www.scoop.co.nz
NZ dollar halts slide as earnings concerns ease
April 9 – The New Zealand dollar halted its slide as the U.S. corporate earnings season begins to gather steam and shares on Wall Street edged higher.
Bed Bath and Beyond Inc., the largest U.S. home furnishings retailer, rose 24% as its profit fell less than expected, helping nudge the Standard and Poor’s 500 Index up 1.2%. Alcoa Inc., the largest aluminium company in the U.S. and first on the Dow Jones Industrial Average to report its results, posted a first-quarter loss US$497. It rose 3.5% on the Dow, erasing the previous day’s fall.
“Earnings will be the watershed – either it will reinforce the rally or things are not quite as rosy, and we may see a turn again,” said Philip Borkin, economist at ANZ National Bank. It’s too difficult to predict whether the earnings season will be the catalyst to drive the kiwi down, but “it will eventually come off,” he said.
The kiwi rose to 57.75 U.S. cents from 57.35 cents yesterday, and increased to 57.75 yen from 57.25. It gained to 81.43 Australian cents from 81.20 cents yesterday, and climbed to 43.55 euro cents from 43.44 cents.
Borkin said the kiwi may trade between 57.10 U.S. cents and 58.50 cents today.
The New Zealand and Australian currencies may fall versus the U.S. currency if Australian employment data out this today is weaker than expected. Economists predict that 25,000 more Australians will join the dole queue, lifting unemployment to 5.4%, according to a Reuters survey.
“Should this data disappoint, we could well see New Zealand/Australian dollar cross move back towards 0.8250 as investors are squeezed out of short positions,” said Danica Hampton, currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand.

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