By Swati Pandey and Rebecca Howard
SYDNEY/WELLINGTON, Oct 20 (Reuters) - The Australian dollar came off a six-week high on Thursday after a surprisingly weak employment report showed a big slide in full-time jobs and added to the risk of a further cut in interest rates.
The Australian dollar AUD=D4 snapped a six-day winning streak to trade at $0.7689. It slipped 0.4 percent after earlier rising to $0.7735, its highest level since Sept.8.
Firms shed a huge 53,000 full-time jobs in September even though the unemployment rate stayed at a three-year trough of 5.6 percent. this week Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Governor Philip Lowe emphasised that rising underemployment and weak hours worked meant there was a lot more slack in the labour market than the unemployment rate on its own might suggest.
"Recently there have been more signs of a softening (in the labour market) than a strengthening," Paul Dales, chief economist at Capital Economics said.
"The labour market is edging closer to the 'deterioration' that RBA Governor Lowe hinted earlier this week (and) could prompt more rate cuts."
The Aussie weakened on other crosses as well, falling nearly 0.4 percent each against the euro EURAUD=R and the pound GBPAUD=R . It was off 0.3 percent on the yen AUDJPY= .
Against its New Zealand counterpart AUDNZD=R , it slipped 0.5 percent after rising on Wednesday.
The Aussie has generally outperformed the kiwi dollar in recent weeks on growing expectations of a rate cut in New Zealand and as the RBA is seen staying pat in the near future.
The New Zealand dollar NZD=D4 climbed to a more than 2-week high of $0.7265 after pushing higher overnight when the greenback gave up some ground.
The kiwi has been rallying since consumer price figures early in the week suggested inflation may have finally bottomed, albeit at very low levels.
While the Reserve Bank of New Zealand is still widely expected to cut rates at its Nov. 10 policy meeting, economists are now much more sceptical about cuts after that.
The technical picture had also improved.
"The kiwi, if we remain at the current $0.7230 level by the New York close, has broken out of the downtrend in place since mid-September and now looks positive for a run towards the $0.7315 area," said OM Financial Ltd private client manager Stuart Ive.
New Zealand government bonds 0#NZTSY= were a shade firmer, with yields down 1 basis points at most.
Australian government bond futures recouped early losses on the jobs report, leaving the three-year bond contract YTTc1 steady at 98.30. The 10-year contract YTCc1 was off 1 tick at 97.715. (Editing by Kim Coghill)