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BusinessDesk: NZ dollar gains to 5-mth high vs euro as Europe’s debt back in focus

Currencies
BusinessDesk: NZ dollar gains to 5-mth high vs euro as Europe’s debt back in focus

By Hannah Lynch

The New Zealand dollar rose to a five-month high against the euro after European inflation slowed and amid speculation Spain needs help in meeting its interest payments.

The New Zealand dollar rose to 60.80 euro cents at 8am from 60.46 cents yesterday. The kiwi dollar was little changed on 78.84 US cents just after 8am this morning.

European inflation slowed to 2.8 percent in December from a three-year high of 3 percent a month earlier giving the European Central Bank Union room to lower interest rates.

Bloomberg reported Spain’s Treasury gave a verbal guarantee to an unidentified lender to advance funds to the Valencia government to make a 123 million euro payment. Spain will seek help from the European Union’s rescue fund and the International Monetary Fund, the Spanish newspaper Expansion said.

"The European debt crisis has moved back into focus," said Mike Jones, market strategist at Bank of New Zealand. "The New Zealand dollar has been more or less one of the strongest performers over night."

There is no significant New Zealand data set for release this week. In the US, non-farm payrolls and employment rate will be released on Friday.

The kiwi dollar was recently at 60.38 yen down from 60.46 yen yesterday. It traded at 75.95 Australian cents from 76.19 cents and was little changed at 50.38 British pence.

The trade-weighted index fell to 69.82 from 70.03 yesterday.

(BusinessDesk)

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3 Comments

oil $103, is that the big news or just some cheap money looking for a quick buck?

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Knee jerk reaction to the EZ "planning" (theres that word again) to ban Iranian oil imports.  Because a country in the middle of a desert cant have nuclear power.  Just like Iraq's WMD.

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It's been done quietly, but the solution to the EMU debt crisis is accounting gimmiks.  While the US brags about it's QuanTitative Easing, the ECB very quietly goes about QuaLitative Easing.  Banks write bonds, get a govt guarantee, post it to the ECB, who sends back cash, the banks then use the cash to buy govt bonds.  Simple really, when the whole thing is a ponzi, what matter one more layer of complexity.  Bernie Madoff would be proud.

Quantitative, or qualitative doesn't matter, debauching the currency is the name of the game.  The wealth is transfered from those that use money, to those that create it.

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