NZDUSD Nears Recent Highs as CPI Revives Hawkish Bets

Key Takeaways -NZDUSD moved higher after New Zealand inflation came in firmer than expected -Sticky CPI pushed markets to raise expectations for another RBNZ rate hike -Higher bond yields are giving the kiwi stronger domestic support -Weak business confidence may still limit how far the rally can extend NZDUSD climbed after New Zealand’s inflation report pushed markets back toward a more hawkish view on interest rates. The stronger CPI reading gave the kiwi a firmer domestic support base and revived expectations that the Reserve Bank of New Zealand may need to tighten policy again. That shift has helped move attention away from broad risk sentiment and back toward local rate dynamics. With inflation still proving sticky, traders are no longer assuming that price pressures will return to target without a further policy response. Hot CPI lifts rate expectations New Zealand CPI rose 0.9% in the first quarter, while annual inflation held at 3.1%. That kept inflation above the RBNZ’s 1% to 3% target band for a second straight quarter and prompted a sharp repricing in rate expectations. Markets lifted the implied probability of a 25 basis-point RBNZ hike next month to about 45%, up from 27% a day earlier. Total expected tightening also rose to about 82 basis points from 70 basis points, while the 2-year government bond yield jumped 9 basis points to 3.555%. Kiwi supported, but growth risks remain The rise in yields has given NZDUSD more support in the near term. The pair traded at 0.59162, up 0.00255 or 0.43%, after touching 0.59207 and moving close to the recent five-week high zone. Still, inflation is only one part of the story. Business confidence has weakened sharply, with a private survey showing a net 4% of firms expect conditions to worsen, compared with 48% optimism in the previous quarter. That shift highlights how fragile the domestic recovery remains, even as rate expectations move higher. Key levels stay in focus From a technical perspective, NZDUSD is stabilising just below short-term resistance. Support is seen at 0.5900, followed by 0.5875 and 0.5800, while resistance stands at 0.5930, then 0.6000 and 0.6090. A move above 0.5930 could open the way toward 0.6000, while a break below 0.5900 may trigger a pullback. For now, the kiwi remains supported by inflation-driven rate repricing, though softer growth data could make the rally harder to sustain. Read the full market view on inflation, growth risks and the kiwi’s next test.
Publication date:
2026-04-21 06:41:32 (GMT)
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