NZD: Kiwi Wobbles On It’s Perch

 | Mar 07, 2017 05:43AM ET

The Kiwi has struggled against the USD in recent days, but its travails are showing up on the crosses as well.

The New Zealand is in danger of going from “hero to zero” as we say down under. The Kiwi has given back almost all its Trump-fatigue driven gains of 2017 against not only the USD, but also a number of other currencies via the crosses. There is no one particular reason why everyone’s favourite G-10 yielder seems to have fallen out of favour, rather a combination of factors.

The RBNZ has recently stated that it was comfortable with its current monetary settings and was still not looking at hikes until late 2018 early 2019. This was quite a surprise to many in the domestic market, although my experience there is they are always hawkish on rates anyway. This leads us to the elephant in the room, the U.S. Federal Reserve. Having wrong-footed the market by being universally hawkish into what was supposed to be a non-event March FOMC, precisely the opposite has happened. All we need now is for Friday’s Nonfarm Payroll number to come in around the 190,000 expected and next week should be a done deal. Bond yields have firmed, and a narrowing interest rate differential will undermine the Kiwi although it won’t be alone there in 2017.

Diminishing political risk, most especially in Europe and the glimmer of some actual detail on economic policy by the Trump administration seems to have sapped Kiwi’s haven status. People may laugh at this, but it has merit. If you want to put your money away somewhere far away from the troubles and earn an actual yield on it, you could do a lot worse than New Zealand. My partner and I have just put the Trump hedge on in fact, and bought a small farm down there so consider this facts from the horse’s mouth!

Regarding commodities, New Zealand’s tend to be soft, not hard. Think of it this way, Australia digs gigatonnes of iron ore, copper ore, and coal out of barren patches of red dirt each year and sells it all to the Chinese. New Zealand’s tend to come out of or are made of animals called Daisy, sheep (sheared or chopped up), fish and trees., i.e., soft. The rally in iron ore, copper et al. has dramatically changed Australia’s terms of trade. Meanwhile, dairy prices, in particular, have softened or peaked.

This leads us to tonight’s Global Dairy Auction. (GDT) This is a VERY closely watched number as Dairy is New Zealand’s largest export. The weekly auction since Christmas has all been either flat to -5% in price terms. Tonight it is expected to be somewhere around -10% by the street with optimal growing conditions meaning Daisy the cow is producing a lot of dairy products.

Both the IMF and Moody’s waded in today about household debt and the property market, both saying they present a large negative risk to New Zealand in the event of a “shock.” Finally, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) stuck the knife in this morning, announcing a bank capital review which may or may not result in the banks being required to raise more capital.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

So overall many factors seemed to be conspiring to pluck the Kiwi’s feathers, and this has been reflected in its relative performance on the currency markets.

NZD/USD

Testing an ascending support line that goes back to August 2015 at 6970. The next support being 6866 the December low. Below this, opens 6670 on a technical basis.

Resistance is at 7100 and then 7125/50 containing the 55,100 and 200-day moving averages.(DMA) Behind this, we see a series of daily highs at 7240 and then the long-term descending resistance line at 7390.