The New Zealand Dollar appreciates for the second consecutive day against the US Dollar on Thursday, buoyed by a positive market mood and strong import and export data from China, pointing to the economic recovery of New Zealand’s main trading partner.
Data from China released earlier on Thursday revealed that exports grew beyond expectations favoured by the trade truce with the US. The trade balance shrank, due to a larger-than-expected increase in imports, which suggests that the domestic demand is picking up.
In New Zealand, the RBNZ’s inflation expectations reveal that price pressures are expected to ease in the third quarter of the year, which gives the central bank some leeway to cut interest rates further after their August 20 meeting.
The Kiwi is also drawing support from a weaker US Dollar that remains on its back foot after last week’s payrolls data showed a softening labour market and boosted hopes for Further Fed monetary easing in the coming months.
Investors are now looking at the weekly Jobless claims data, due later today, to assess employment trends better. In that sense, another negative surprise would provide further reasons for the Fed to cut rates in September and might add bearish pressure to the USD.
Exports of goods and services, released by National Bureau Statistics of China, consist of transactions in goods and services (sales, barter, gifts or grants) from residents to non-residents.
Last release: Thu Aug 07, 2025 03:00
Frequency: Monthly
Actual: 7.2%
Consensus: 5.4%
Previous: 5.8%
Source: National Bureau of Statistics of China
The Inflation Expectations released by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand measures business managers´ expectations of annual CPI 2 years from now. An increase in expectations is regarded as inflationary which may anticipate a rise in interest rates. A high reading is positive (or bullish) for the NZD, while a low reading is seen as negative (or bearish).
Last release: Thu Aug 07, 2025 03:00
Frequency: Quarterly
Actual: 2.28%
Consensus: -
Previous: 2.29%
Source: Reserve Bank of New Zealand