
- The New Zealand Dollar faces selling pressure after the NZ budget 2026 announcement.
- On Wednesday, the RBNZ held its OCR steady at 2.25%, but guided a hawkish monetary policy outlook.
- Renewed concerns over the US-Iran deal have underpinned the US Dollar.
The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) drops to near 0.5883 against the US Dollar (USD) during the Asian trading session on Thursday, following the New Zealand (NZ) budget 2026 announcement. The Kiwi pair edges down even as the nations’ Debt Management Office (DMO) has reduced its gross bond issuance plans for four years to June 30, 2030 to NZ$124 billion from NZ$130 billion forecasted in December, which diminishes fears of widening fiscal concerns.
For the current year, DMO’s plans to issue NZ$34 billion worth of bonds remain unchanged with the December forecast.
However, the broader outlook of the antipodean has improved as prospects of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) raising interest rates in the July meeting have increased after a “hawkish hold” on Wednesday.
Markets quickly nudged up the probability of a quarter-point increase in July to around 75%, and saw rates reaching 3.0% by year’s end, Reuters report.
On Wednesday, the RBNZ left its Official Cash Rate (OCR) steady at 2.25%, as expected, but expressed the need to tighten monetary conditions amid rising inflation. “Committee sees inflationary pressures going forward, agrees cash rate needs to be higher going forward,” RBNZ Governor Anna Breman said.
Meanwhile, the US Dollar trades sharply higher on renewed concerns regarding the dismissal of the United States (US)-Iran negotiations. As of writing, the US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the Greenback’s value against six major currencies, trades 0.2% higher to near 99.40.
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