A combination of factors dragged NZD/USD to its lowest level since November 2020
The NZD/USD pair remained depressed through the European session, albeit managing to recover a few pips from sub-0.6600 levels, or a 15-month low touched earlier this Thursday. A combination of factors dragged the NZD/USD pair lower for the sixth successive day on Thursday and led to an extension of the recent bearish trajectory witnessed over the past two weeks or so. The post-FOMC US dollar rally remained uninterrupted, which, along with the risk-off impulse in markets drove flows away from the perceived riskier kiwi. The Fed reaffirmed market expectations for an eventual liftoff in March, on Wednesday, which, in turn, pushed the yield on the 2-year US government bond to its highest level since January 2020. The yield on the benchmark 10-year note shot back to the 1.85% threshold and lifted the key USD Index to the highest level since mid-December.
Concerns about a faster policy tightening by the Fed, along with political tensions between Russia and Ukraine, took its toll on the global risk sentiment. This was evident from a slump in the equity markets, which further benefitted the greenback's relative safe-haven status and exerted additional downward pressure on the NZD/USD pair. The oversold RSI (14) on the daily chart assisted the pair to find some support and rebound over 30 pips from the daily swing low, around the 0.6595 region. That said, any meaningful recovery seems elusive amid sustained USD buying. Any further move up might still be seen as a selling opportunity and run the risk of fizzling out quickly. Market participants are now looking forward to US economic releases – Advance Q4 GDP, Durable Goods Orders, Weekly Jobless Claims, and Pending Home Sales. This, along with the US bond yields and the broader market risk sentiment, will influence the USD price dynamics and produce some short-term trading opportunities around the NZD/USD pair.