
Australia, New Zealand dollars tumble as Israel's strike on Iran hammers global risk
SYDNEY: The Australian and New Zealand dollars tumbled on Friday as Israel's strike on Iran hammered global stocks and drove investors into safe-haven assets, with domestic bond yields diving to over a month lows.
The commodity-sensitive currencies often track global risk sentiment and tend to take a hit when equity markets slide.
The Aussie plunged 0.9% to $0.6474, having risen 0.5% overnight to as high as $0.6534.
It was already showing signs of fatigue as the currency has been unable to break a key resistance level of $0.6550 overnight even as the greenback slid due to another round of soft data.
Australia, New Zealand dollars slip after US and China agree trade framework
For the week, it is down 0.3%.
The kiwi dollar dropped 1% to $0.6011.
It gained gaining 0.7% overnight, hitting a high of $0.6071.
Support comes in around $0.5990, while resistance is at the multi-month top of $0.6080.
For the week, it is down 0.1%. Israel said early on Friday that it struck Iran.
Oil prices jumped over 6%, Wall Street futures dropped over 1%, while safe-haven currencies like the Japanese yen and Swiss franc rose.
Local bonds also rallied. Australia's ten-year government bond yields slid 11 basis points to 4.133%, the lowest since May 1, while New Zealand's ten-year government bond yields dived 8 bps to a six-week low of 4.529%.
Sean Callow, a senior analyst at ITC Markets, said the trend for the Aussie is still up given the pressure on the US dollar from a sluggish US economy and investor unease over the US policy outlook.
'Investors are likely to expect that Israel's strikes will be contained to a relatively short period, not something that will dictate market direction multi-week,' he said.
Overnight, another round of weak US data - higher weekly jobless claims and soft producer prices - meant markets have now fully priced in a rate cut from the Federal Reserve by September.
That pushed the US dollar to its lowest since early 2022, although it did rebound a little on Friday.
Down Under, swaps imply around an 80% chance the Reserve Bank of Australia will cut rates by a quarter point to 3.60% at its next meeting on July 8, and move to 3.10% by year-end.
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