The NZD/USD pair has tested territory marginally below the round-level support of 0.6300 in the European session. The Kiwi asset has faced an immense sell-off as the US Dollar Index (DXY) has attempted a solid recovery and investors are worried about Chinese economic prospects.
S&P500 futures have turned choppy ahead of the United States Retail Sales data. Investors are demonstrating marginal caution in an overall upbeat market mood as the second-quarter result season has kicked off. The US Dollar Index has picked strength after testing fresh annual lows of 99.60. For a bullish reversal, the USD Index has to pass through plenty of filters. Currently, the USD Index is broadly bearish.
Investors dumped the US Dollar Index amid hopes that it has lost its broader appeal as the interest rate peak by the Federal Reserve (Fed) is near while other central banks are still raising interest rates. In addition to that, the pace of inflation softening in the United States has remained higher in comparison with other global economies. Eurozone inflation is still near 6% and United Kingdom’s inflation is sticky above 8.5% while headline inflation in the American economy has significantly softened to 3.0% and core inflation has decelerated to 4.8%.
The real action in the USD Index would be driven by US monthly Retail Sales data for June. Analysts at NBF expect auto sales and gasoline station receipts should have increased during the month, which, combined with advances in housing-related categories, should translate into a 0.4% progression for headline sales. Spending on items other than vehicles, meanwhile, might have advanced 0.3%.
On the New Zealand Dollar front, weakness in second-quarter Gross Domestic Product (GDP) figures of China reported on Monday has cautioned investors about the economic outlook. Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley has revised down its China 2023 economic growth forecast by 0.7% to 5% after the country reported a "weak" second quarter GDP reading, reported Reuters.
It is worth noting that New Zealand is one of the leading trading partners of China and China’s weak growth prospects impact the New Zealand Dollar.
Going forward, NZ’s inflation data will be keenly watched, which is scheduled for Wednesday. The quarterly Consumer Price Index (CPI) is seen softening to 0.9% vs. the former pace of 1.2%. Annualized CPI is expected to decelerate to 5.9% against the prior release of 6.7%.
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