The NZD/USD pair climbs to near almost three-week high of 0.6030 in Monday’s North American session. The Kiwi asset strengthens as the New Zealand Dollar (NZD) performs strongly ahead of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s (RBNZ) monetary policy announcement on Wednesday.
The RBNZ is widely anticipated to keep its Official Cash Rate (OCR) steady at 5.5%. Therefore, investors will keenly focus on the interest rate guidance.
Recently, the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research (NZIER) ran a “shadow board”, which showed that analysts were divided over the August rate cut. Over half of analysts favored a quarter-to-a-percent rate cut to prevent the economy from slowing further. Other analysts wanted to see more evidence of inflation easing further.
Meanwhile, the US Dollar (USD) trades sideways, with investors focusing on the United States (US) Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for July, which will be published on Wednesday. The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the Greenback’s value against six major currencies, stays in a tight range above 103.00.
NZD/USD struggles to extend upside above the immediate supply zone plotted in the range of 0.6037-0.6046 on a daily timeframe. The asset has recovered strongly above the 20-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) near 0.5990, suggesting that the near-term outlook is bullish. The major aims to stabilize above the 50-day EMA, which hovers around 0.6030.
The 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) has returned inside the 40.00-60.00 range, suggesting that the bearish momentum has ended.
More upside would appear if the asset decisively breaks May 3 high at 0.6046. This would push the asset higher to July 17 high near 0.6100 and July 12 high of 0.6127.
In an alternate scenario, a downside move below April 19 low around 0.5850 would drag the asset towards the round-level support of 0.5800, followed by 26 October 2023 low at 0.5770.
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) announces its interest rate decision after its seven scheduled annual policy meetings. If the RBNZ is hawkish and sees inflationary pressures rising, it raises the Official Cash Rate (OCR) to bring inflation down. This is positive for the New Zealand Dollar (NZD) since higher interest rates attract more capital inflows. Likewise, if it reaches the view that inflation is too low it lowers the OCR, which tends to weaken NZD.
Read more.Next release: Wed Aug 14, 2024 02:00
Frequency: Irregular
Consensus: 5.5%
Previous: 5.5%
Source: Reserve Bank of New Zealand
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) holds monetary policy meetings seven times a year, announcing their decision on interest rates and the economic assessments that influenced their decision. The central bank offers clues on the economic outlook and future policy path, which are of high relevance for the NZD valuation. Positive economic developments and upbeat outlook could lead the RBNZ to tighten the policy by hiking interest rates, which tends to be NZD bullish. The policy announcements are usually followed by Governor Adrian Orr’s press conference.
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