The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) remains defensive against the US Dollar (USD) and registers solid losses after dropping to a two-week low of 0.5870. However, buyers reclaim the 0.5900 figure, targeting a challenge of 0.5942, the 50-day moving average (DMA). At the time of writing, the NZD/USD is trading at 0.5908.
The US Dollar stages a comeback after the US Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) revealed that Retail Sales rose above forecasts of 0.3%, at 0.7% MoM in September, though below upward revised August’s figures from 0.6% to 0.8%. Recently, the Fed revealed that Industrial Production exceeded forecast and August’s data of 0%, expanding at a 0.3% MoM pace.
Consequently, US Treasury bond yields advanced nine basis points at 4.80%, contrary to the Greenback as seen by the US Dollar Index (DXY). The DXY, which tracks the performance of the US Dollar vs. six currencies, drops 0.15%, at 106.05.
Meanwhile, Fed officials are crossing newswires, led by Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin, saying the Fed has a restrictive policy stance and that despite longer-term rates having risen, the Fed can’t rely on them for further tightening. Barkin added that he’s unsure of his view on the upcoming monetary policy meeting.
Earlier in the Asian session, the New Zealand docket featured the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which rose by 1.8% in Q3, below estimates of 2%. Still, the yearly rate eased to 5.6% from 6%, the estimated 5.9%.
The NZD/SUD daily chart portrays the pair jumping off the weekly lows, though shy of challenging the 50-DMA At 0.5942. NZD buyers must reclaim the latter so they can threaten to claim 0.6000 before challenging the latest cycle high of 0.6055, October 11 high. Conversely, failure at the 50-DMA could open the door to test the year-to-date (YTD) lows of 0.5859.
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