On Wednesday, the Kiwi failed to hold gains that took the NZD/USD pair above the 100-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) and turned south towards 0.6180. Following the minutes, US Treasury yields rose, benefiting the greenback while investors eagerly await labour market data.
According to the FOMC minutes from the latest June meeting, despite anonymously agreeing to pause, some members of the Committee supported the case of hiking by 25 basis points. In that sense, driven by a tight labour market, members worried that it might fuel inflationary pressures but considered pausing to assess the effects of monetary policy on the US economy. In addition, members agreed that it would be appropriate to maintain rates in a restrictive stance.
As a reaction, the US yields rallied across the board. The 2-year yield rose to 4.95% while the 5 and 10-year bond rates to 4.24% and 3.93%, respectively. As bond yields tend to favour the local currency's value, the USD gained interest.
That being said, the focus now turns to June's crucial US labour market data. On Thursday, the ADP Research Institute will release employment figures expected to come in at 228k and decelerate from its previous 278k and the US Department of Labor Jobless Claims is expected to accelerate to 245k on a weekly basis.
According to the daily chart, the technical outlook for the NZD/USD has turned neutral for the short term as there is no clear dominance between buyers and sellers. In addition, the 20, 100 and 200-day SMA converge towards the 0.6200 area, awaiting a fundamental catalyst.
Support Levels to watch: 0.6170 (200-day SMA), 0.6160(20-day SMA), 0.6130.
Resistance Levels to watch: 0.6190 (100-day SMA), 0.6200, 0.6210.
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