The New Zealand bonds disappointed Tuesday, tracking weakness in the U.S. counterpart and as investors moved away from safe haven assets amid gains in riskier classes including equities and oil.
In intraday trade, the yield on the benchmark 10-year bond, which moves inversely to its price, jumped 1-1/2 basis points to 3.21 percent, the yield on 7-year note climbed 2 basis points to 2.81 percent while the yield on short-term 2-year note also traded 2 basis points higher at 2.15 percent.
New Zealand’s goods trade data released last week, showed that the country recorded NZD18 million deficit in February, weaker than expected. February is typically a strong month for export volumes (due to high meat and dairy volumes), meaning the seasonally adjusted deficit was much larger at NZD411 million. The annual trade deficit also deteriorated sharply to NZD3.8 billion as a large one-off export from February 2016 dropped out of the annual calculation.
Seasonally adjusted exports fell by 2.8 percent in February, more than unwinding January’s 0.9 percent rise. While higher dairy export prices are bolstering export receipts, lower milk production is weighing on export volumes and dampening the overall impulse. Dairy export receipts tracked sideways in February but were still up 5.6 percent on a year earlier.
Meanwhile, the New Zealand’s benchmark S&P/NZX 50 Index closed 0.04 percent lower at 7,065.23, while at 05:00 GMT, the FxWirePro's Hourly NZD Strength Index remained neutral at -18.03 (a reading above +75 indicates a bullish trend, while that below -75 a bearish trend). For more details, visit http://www.fxwirepro.com/currencyindex


Trump-Iran Ceasefire Sends Dollar Tumbling as Global Currencies Surge
Italy's Service Sector Contracts for First Time in 16 Months Amid Rising Costs and Weakening Demand
U.S.-China Trade Talks: Trump and Xi Set for Summit Amid Rare Earths Focus
Asian Currencies Rally as Dollar Weakens, Trump-Iran Ceasefire Boosts Risk Sentiment
Gold Prices Surge to Three-Week High as Trump-Iran Ceasefire Weakens Dollar
Gold Prices Dip Amid Middle East Uncertainty and Inflation Fears
Xi Jinping Pushes Demand-Driven Strategy to Modernize China's Service Sector
Gulf Ceasefire Cracks Rattle Asian Markets and Push Oil Prices Higher
Oil Prices Crash Nearly 15% After Trump-Iran Ceasefire Deal
RBNZ Holds Rates at 2.25% as Middle East Conflict Fuels Inflation Concerns 



