NZD/USD (NZDUSD) is up 0.51% at Jun 30 10:25(ET), now at $0.56753, with a 7-day up of 0.19%.

The New Zealand Dollar advanced against the US Dollar during Tuesday’s session, driven by a combination of robust domestic business sentiment, stronger-than-expected economic indicators from China, and a softer US Dollar following underwhelming US consumer data.
A key domestic catalyst for the New Zealand Dollar was the release of the ANZ Business Outlook survey for June. The headline business confidence index surged to 36.6 from 10.0 in May, marking its highest level since February. Similarly, the Own Activity Outlook rose to 36.9. While various inflation and pricing gauges in the survey eased—partly aided by falling fuel costs—the sharp recovery in overall business optimism suggested that the domestic economic recovery is on firmer ground. This constructive backdrop reinforced market expectations that the Reserve Bank of New Zealand may still need to deliver gradual interest rate increases in the coming months, supporting the currency's yield appeal.
Additional support for the Kiwi came from New Zealand's largest trading partner, China. The official National Bureau of Statistics manufacturing purchasing managers' index rose to 50.3 in June, beating expectations of 50.1 and returning to expansion territory. The non-manufacturing PMI also defied contraction forecasts to print at 50.2. The improvement in Chinese industrial activity, led by high-tech manufacturing, lifted global risk sentiment and bolstered demand expectations for commodity-exporting economies, directly benefiting the risk-sensitive New Zealand Dollar.
Conversely, the US Dollar faced headwinds on the back of weaker-than-expected macroeconomic data. The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index rose only marginally to 91.2 in June, falling short of market forecasts. Beneath the headline number, the Present Situation Index declined to 116.4, and the labor market sub-indices showed notable softening. Consumers reporting that jobs were hard to get rose to 22.5%, the highest level since early 2021. This cooling signal in the US labor market, combined with easing geopolitical risks from ongoing US-Iran ceasefire negotiations, reduced safe-haven demand for the greenback and triggered profit-taking after its multi-month rally.
Ultimately, the combination of rising risk appetite, constructive New Zealand business conditions, positive trade-partner spillovers, and a pullback in the US Dollar on soft consumer metrics allowed the base currency to outperform the quote currency during the session.
Technically, NZD/USD (NZDUSD) shows a MACD (12,26,9) value of -0.002, indicating a sell signal. The RSI at 35.301 suggests neutral condition and the Williams %R at 79.856 suggests sell condition. Please monitor closely.

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