3 Forex Factors Dragging the Kiwi Down


What in the forex world is happening to the Kiwi?! NZD/USD has plummeted by roughly 300 pips in the past week and looks ready to dive deeper. Here are some reasons why the Kiwi could fall further.

1. Jawboning from RBNZ Governor Wheeler & Prime Minister Key

Last week, RBNZ Governor Graeme Wheeler’s testimony triggered a massive selloff for the Kiwi, as the central bank head spoke of welcoming moves to a more sustainable exchange rate. He reiterated that the current Kiwi trading levels are unjustified and unsustainable, hinting that the latter might be a factor that could push the RBNZ to intervene.

Earlier today, Prime Minister John Key expressed support for potential currency intervention when he pointed out that the fair value of NZD/USD should be at .6500. Since the pair is currently trading at more than a thousand pips above that level, Key mentioned that it would be logical for the RBNZ to step in the currency market.

2. Another secret intervention?

Fresh off the press is the RBNZ’s report on foreign currency assets and liabilities, which revealed that the central bank actually intervened in the forex market last month. No wonder NZD/USD suddenly dropped by more than a hundred pips in today’s Asian session!

Data showed that the RBNZ sold 521 million NZD in August, its highest net sale since July 2007. While Prime Minister Key also claimed that he didn’t know if Governor Wheeler and his men were already intervening, the RBNZ’s secret forex intervention last year suggests that they probably pulled the same stunt again without telling the markets. Very sneaky, huh?

3. Declining Global Dairy Trade price index

Another factor that might drag the Kiwi down is the upcoming release of the Global Dairy Trade (GDT) price index, which shows the change in dairy prices based on the weighted average of 9 dairy products sold in New Zealand’s dairy auction. This is seen as a leading indicator of commodity price inflation and the country’s trade balance.

This release has drawn a lot of attention in the past few months, as declining dairy prices have started to weigh on New Zealand’s economic performance. Apart from weighing on export demand and revenues, lower dairy prices also result in a reduction of milk payouts to farmers and suppliers, which could hurt spending and investment in the sector later on.

The next release is scheduled on Thursday, with another negative reading likely to push the Kiwi lower. While the GDT price index has stayed flat in the previous auction, it wouldn’t be surprising to see the downtrend resume, as readings have been mostly negative since February.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD extends its upside above 0.6600, eyes on RBA rate decision

AUD/USD extends its upside above 0.6600, eyes on RBA rate decision

The AUD/USD pair extends its upside around 0.6610 during the Asian session on Monday. The downbeat US employment data for April has exerted some selling pressure on the US Dollar across the board. Investors will closely monitor the Reserve Bank of Australia interest rate decision on Tuesday.

AUD/USD News

EUR/USD holds positive ground above 1.0750 ahead of Eurozone PMI, PPI data

EUR/USD holds positive ground above 1.0750 ahead of Eurozone PMI, PPI data

The EUR/USD trades in positive territory for the fourth consecutive day near 1.0765 on Monday during the early Asian trading hours. The softer US Dollar provides some support to the major pair.

EUR/USD News

Gold holds below $2,300, Fedspeak eyed

Gold holds below $2,300, Fedspeak eyed

Gold price loses its recovery momentum around $2,295 on Monday during the early Asian session. Investors will keep an eye on Fedspeaks this week, along with the first reading of the US Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index for May on Friday.

Gold News

Bitcoin Cash could become a Cardano partnerchain as 66% of 11.3K voters say “Aye”

Bitcoin Cash could become a Cardano partnerchain as 66% of 11.3K voters say “Aye”

Bitcoin Cash is the current mania in the Cardano ecosystem following a proposal by the network’s executive inviting the public to vote on X, about a possible integration.

Read more

Week ahead: BoE and RBA decisions headline a calm week

Week ahead: BoE and RBA decisions headline a calm week

Bank of England meets on Thursday, unlikely to signal rate cuts. Reserve Bank of Australia could maintain a higher-for-longer stance. Elsewhere, Bank of Japan releases summary of opinions.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures