10 USD = 12.0060 NZD
http://www.google.com/search?q=399+usd+to+nzd
Nzd/usd 0.8011 nzd/jpy 61.028 aud/nzd 1.2981 eur/nzd 1.7359 gbp/nzd 1.9941 nzd/cad 0.8045 nzd/chf 0.7058
$52 usd.
One NZD is worth around 83 cents.
The Sky Tower cost $50 Million (USD) which is $75 Million (NZD)
The currency exchange for New Zealand and the United States fluctuates. The current exchange rate is one New Zealand dollar to roughly eighty cents in United States currency.
Panama uses both the Balboa (PAB) and the US dollar (USD) as legal currency with the value of the Balboa fixed at one PAB equaling one USD.
First, find out what the names of the two currencies are called. US currency is United States Dollar (USD). NZ currency is New Zealand Dollar (NZD). The go to Google and type in (for the situation of converting $100 USD to NZD): $100 USD to NZD Google has a currency conversion function that will calculate the amount. I just typed that into Google and the first thing that came up in the search was: 100 U.S. dollars = 138.331719 New Zealand dollars You can do this for any form of currency. Also, instead of doing that, you could just go here: http:/www.google.com/finance/converter and do it. That is a link to the Google currency converter page. - ElectroGoofy
New Zealand Halfpennies in the following years, and in mint condition might fetch up to - 1941 - $150 NZD 1942 - $450 NZD 1953 - $350 NZD 1954 - $350 NZD New Zealand Pennies in the following years, and in mint condition might fetch up to - 1941 - $400 NZD 1942 - $400 NZD 1945 (burnished) - $450 NZD 1954 - $275 NZD 1954 (strapless - Queen Elizabeths dress has no shoulder strap) - $2,200 NZD These represent New Zealand most valuable predecimal bronze coins.
Forex currency pairs are categorized into **major, minor, and exotic pairs** based on their trading volume and market liquidity. **Major pairs** include the most traded currencies globally, always involving the U.S. dollar (USD), such as **EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY, USD/CHF, AUD/USD, USD/CAD, and NZD/USD**. These pairs have high liquidity, tight spreads, and lower volatility. *Minor pairs*, also known as cross-currency pairs, do not include the USD but involve other major currencies like EUR, GBP, and JPY, examples being *EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY, and AUD/NZD*. They have slightly wider spreads than major pairs but remain liquid. *Exotic pairs** consist of one major currency paired with a currency from a developing or smaller economy, such as **USD/TRY (U.S. dollar/Turkish lira), EUR/PLN (euro/Polish zloty), and GBP/MXN (British pound/Mexican peso)*. Exotic pairs tend to have lower liquidity, higher spreads, and greater volatility, making them riskier to trade.
2.30 NZD to 1 Euro