NZD/USD (NZDUSD) is down 0.50% at Jun 23 07:35(ET), now at $0.56818, with a 7-day down of 2.52%.

The New Zealand Dollar faced persistent downward pressure against its US counterpart, extending its multi-session slide to slip below the key psychological support level near 0.5700. A critical headwind driving this weakness is the prevailing risk-off sentiment across global financial markets, fueled by deepening skepticism regarding the US-Iran peace negotiations. Although a temporary ceasefire had initially provided market relief, recent statements from negotiators indicating a lack of a concrete plan to reopen the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz have reignited energy supply concerns. As a high-beta, growth-linked currency, the Kiwi remains highly sensitive to global risk dynamics, leaving it vulnerable to this defensive shift in investor sentiment.
On the other side of the pair, the US Dollar has drawn significant strength from a rapid hawkish repricing of the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy trajectory. Following the June Federal Open Market Committee meeting, which marked the debut of the new Chair, Kevin Warsh, and included the release of the Summary of Economic Projections, market participants have aggressively upgraded their tightening expectations. The Fed’s upward revision of both near-term core inflation forecasts and the projected terminal federal funds rate has pushed US Treasury yields higher. Fed funds futures are now pricing in a near-90 percent probability of a rate hike by December, alongside a strong likelihood of a September move, presenting a stark contrast to expectations just a week ago. This surge in yields has widened interest-rate differentials in favor of the greenback, drawing institutional capital flows away from riskier peers.
This policy divergence is further highlighted by the domestic backdrop in New Zealand. While local economists still expect the Reserve Bank of New Zealand to eventually raise the Official Cash Rate, recent selected price index data revealed that cooling demand is effectively containing cost-push pressures. This moderation in inflation has granted the RBNZ more policy flexibility and breathing room, reducing the urgency for immediate, aggressive monetary tightening. The widening yield spread between a hawkishly repositioned Federal Reserve and a more patient RBNZ, compounded by fragile geopolitical conditions, suggests that the downward pressure on the currency pair is firmly supported by broader macroeconomic trends.
Technically, NZD/USD (NZDUSD) shows a MACD (12,26,9) value of -0.003, indicating a sell signal. The RSI at 30.723 suggests neutral condition and the Williams %R at 100.000 suggests oversold condition. Please monitor closely.

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