* Aussie jumps vs USD, yen & euro
* Retail sales surge 1.2 pct in Jan, more than double forecasts
* Trade surplus at highest in three years
By Gyles Beckford and Cecile Lefort
SYDNEY/WELLINGTON, March 6 (Reuters) - The Australian dollar leapt half a cent on Thursday after upbeat retail sales and trade data supported a steady interest rate outlook.
The Aussie
Resistance was found around $0.9040, ahead of key chart barriers at the February peak of $0.9081.
Australian retail sales surged by the most in almost a year in January, while the country's A$1.4 billion trade surplus was the largest in almost three years, far exceeding estimates of A$400 million.
The Aussie had already been buoyed after data on Wednesday showed the economy sped up more than expected in the fourth quarter.
The Aussie flew against the safe-haven yen to 92.52
The euro fell to A$1.5205
Australia's strong data were the clearest evidence to date that record low interest rates were feeding through the economy.
Some dealers, however, remain cautious.
"The data has been a little stronger but it's not anything significant where the RBA is going to be swayed to raise rates,"
said a trader at a European bank in Singapore, seeing the Aussie unable to sustain a move above 91 cents.
"It's probably solidifying the neutral stance they have already indicated," he said.
"To more above it would have to be shift in policy or something that would be detrimental to the U.S."
The strong data pressured Australian government bond futures with the three-year bond contract
Swap rates were now pricing in 13 basis points of rate hikes in Australia on a 12-month horizon
The New Zealand dollar
"A combination of a higher Australian dollar, a stable Chinese outlook and an easing in risk aversion has seen the New Zealand dollar rise," Bancorp Treasury analysts said in a note.
The kiwi is seen having positive momentum, supported by expectations of central bank rate rises starting next week.
Near-term support is seen at $0.8390 and below that $0.8375. The mid-January high of $0.8433 is the first line of resistance followed by the late October high of $0.8446.
However, the kiwi could not keep pace with the neighboring Aussie, which gained a further 0.5 percent to a one-week high of NZ$1.0730
The Aussie has gained nearly 1 percent on the kiwi this week, driven by the strong data.
New Zealand government bonds
(Editing by Eric Meijer)
((Cecile.Lefort@thomsonreuters.com)(+61 2 9373-1234)(Reuters Messaging: cecile.lefort.thomsonreuters@reuters.net))
Keywords: MARKETS AUSTRALIA/FOREX