Risk-off sentiment pushed NZD/USD down 0.7%, near 0.5900, erasing February gains, bullish momentum fading

    by VT Markets
    /
    Mar 6, 2026
    NZD/USD fell over 0.7% on Thursday, ending near 0.5900 and hitting its lowest level since late January. It has retraced most February gains after topping near 0.6090 in early February and breaking support around 0.5920. The RBNZ kept the Official Cash Rate at 2.25% in February. It signalled no hike until late 2026, with overnight index swaps down about eight basis points and September hike odds falling to about 40% from 68%.

    Monetary Policy Divergence

    The policy gap with Australia widened after the RBA lifted rates to 3.85% in February and is weighing another move for May. This has added pressure on the New Zealand Dollar. Safe-haven demand supported the US Dollar as the Strait of Hormuz was described as effectively closed. US crude oil rose above $80 per barrel for the first time since mid-2024, raising New Zealand’s oil import costs. The Federal Reserve held rates at 3.50% to 3.75% in January, with minutes showing a hawkish tilt. US Non-Farm Payrolls are forecast at around 60K for February, down from 130K in January. NZD/USD traded at 0.5898, with support near 0.5890–0.5900, then 0.5850 and 0.5800. Resistance sits at 0.5950, then 0.6000 and 0.6050.

    Trade Bias And Key Risks

    The current market environment strongly favors short positions on the NZD/USD pair. Geopolitical tension from the Strait of Hormuz crisis is driving a classic flight to safety, strengthening the US Dollar and punishing risk-sensitive currencies like the Kiwi. We see this trend continuing as long as global risk aversion is the dominant theme. The monetary policy divergence between the central banks provides a powerful fundamental reason for this bearish view. The RBNZ’s dovish stance, keeping rates at 2.25%, contrasts sharply with the Federal Reserve’s hawkish tilt and rates above 3.50%. This interest rate differential, which is the widest we have seen since late 2024, makes holding US Dollars more profitable than holding New Zealand Dollars. New Zealand’s specific economic vulnerabilities are also coming into focus. With US Crude Oil prices holding above $80 a barrel, the country’s status as a net energy importer becomes a significant drag on its economy. Furthermore, we saw prices in this week’s Global Dairy Trade auction slip another 1.4%, signaling weakness in New Zealand’s most important export sector. Given the strong downward momentum, we should consider buying NZD/USD put options with a strike price at or below 0.5850. Using options allows us to define our maximum risk, which is prudent ahead of today’s highly anticipated US Non-Farm Payrolls report. A confirmed daily close below the 0.5900 support level would be the signal to initiate or add to these positions. The NFP release is the main event risk, with a weak forecast of 60K that could cause a temporary spike. However, we recall periods in 2025 when the market looked past soft labor data because the broader inflation narrative was more compelling. A surprisingly strong NFP number would likely accelerate the sell-off, while a miss might only provide a better level to establish new shorts once the dust settles. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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