NZD/USD slips below 0.59 as US Dollar firms into Fed week
NZD/USD slipped 0.4% on Tuesday, closing near 0.5885 after a session high close to 0.5925 and a fresh rejection from the 0.5900 handle.
  • NZD/USD shed 0.4% on Tuesday, closing near 0.5885 after the 0.5900 zone capped a push to the session high at 0.5925.
  • The Fed's Wednesday decision is expected to hold rates at 3.50% to 3.75%, with focus on Chair Powell's tone on inflation.
  • The RBNZ's Breman speaks Wednesday; Thursday's ANZ-Roy Morgan consumer confidence print could shift Kiwi sentiment.

NZD/USD slipped 0.4% on Tuesday, closing near 0.5885 after a session high close to 0.5925 and a fresh rejection from the 0.5900 handle. The pair traded in a roughly 65-pip range between 0.5860 and 0.5925, with a series of lower highs forming through the European and US sessions as the early Asia bid faded. Bullish momentum from the Tokyo open waned quickly once price failed to hold above 0.5900, leaving small-bodied candles around 0.5885 as the session ground out.

On the New Zealand side, attention turns to a scheduled speech from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand's (RBNZ) Breman on Wednesday for any read on the policy outlook, with Thursday's Australia and New Zealand Banking Group (ANZ)-Roy Morgan consumer confidence release providing a check on household sentiment after a soft prior reading of 91.3. The Iran conflict's pressure on commodity prices and freight costs continues to weigh on growth-sensitive currencies, including the New Zealand Dollar, and Friday's Producer Price Index (PPI) data out of Australia will be watched for a regional inflation read-through.

On the US Dollar side, the Fed's policy decision at 18:00 UTC on Wednesday is the central focus, with rates expected to be held at 3.50% to 3.75%. Markets are watching closely for Chair Powell's tone on inflation given the persistent oil price pressure from the ongoing Iran conflict and Strait of Hormuz disruptions. A hawkish hold would likely keep NZD/USD pinned below the 0.5900 handle into Thursday's US Q1 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and Core Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index (PCE) prints, where Core PCE is forecast at 3.2% YoY versus 3% prior.


NZD/USD 15-minute chart

Chart Analysis NZD/USD

Technical Analysis

In the 15-minute chart, NZD/USD trades at 0.5885, keeping a bearish intraday tone as the pair holds below the daily open at 0.5915. With price unable to recover that overhead reference level, short-term action remains capped, while the Stochastic RSI easing back toward mid-range around 44 suggests fading upside momentum after earlier overbought readings.

On the topside, the daily open at 0.5915 stands as immediate resistance and would need to be reclaimed to alleviate the current downside pressure and open the door to a corrective bounce. On the downside, the absence of nearby mapped supports leaves the pair vulnerable to further slippage, with traders likely watching for fresh price-based floors to emerge on subsequent dips.

In the daily chart, NZD/USD trades at 0.5885, holding above both the 200-period and 50-period Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs), which sit clustered just below price around 0.5850–0.5860 and suggest a constructive near-term bias. The Stochastic RSI hovers in overbought territory near 74, hinting that upside momentum remains firm but may be vulnerable to a pause or shallow pullback after the latest advance.

On the topside, immediate resistance is reinforced by the 200-period EMA at 0.5849, followed closely by the 50-period EMA at 0.5861, forming a nearby demand-turned-acceptance band just under the market that bulls will want to defend on any dip. A daily close well above these clustered averages would keep the pair biased higher, while a break back beneath them would signal that the current recovery phase is losing traction.

(The technical analysis of this story was written with the help of an AI tool.)

New Zealand Dollar FAQs

The New Zealand Dollar (NZD), also known as the Kiwi, is a well-known traded currency among investors. Its value is broadly determined by the health of the New Zealand economy and the country’s central bank policy. Still, there are some unique particularities that also can make NZD move. The performance of the Chinese economy tends to move the Kiwi because China is New Zealand’s biggest trading partner. Bad news for the Chinese economy likely means less New Zealand exports to the country, hitting the economy and thus its currency. Another factor moving NZD is dairy prices as the dairy industry is New Zealand’s main export. High dairy prices boost export income, contributing positively to the economy and thus to the NZD.

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) aims to achieve and maintain an inflation rate between 1% and 3% over the medium term, with a focus to keep it near the 2% mid-point. To this end, the bank sets an appropriate level of interest rates. When inflation is too high, the RBNZ will increase interest rates to cool the economy, but the move will also make bond yields higher, increasing investors’ appeal to invest in the country and thus boosting NZD. On the contrary, lower interest rates tend to weaken NZD. The so-called rate differential, or how rates in New Zealand are or are expected to be compared to the ones set by the US Federal Reserve, can also play a key role in moving the NZD/USD pair.

Macroeconomic data releases in New Zealand are key to assess the state of the economy and can impact the New Zealand Dollar’s (NZD) valuation. A strong economy, based on high economic growth, low unemployment and high confidence is good for NZD. High economic growth attracts foreign investment and may encourage the Reserve Bank of New Zealand to increase interest rates, if this economic strength comes together with elevated inflation. Conversely, if economic data is weak, NZD is likely to depreciate.

The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) tends to strengthen during risk-on periods, or when investors perceive that broader market risks are low and are optimistic about growth. This tends to lead to a more favorable outlook for commodities and so-called ‘commodity currencies’ such as the Kiwi. Conversely, NZD tends to weaken at times of market turbulence or economic uncertainty as investors tend to sell higher-risk assets and flee to the more-stable safe havens.

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