Kiwi surges as RBNZ flags end of easing; NZD/USD clears key resistance
The New Zealand dollar jumped after the Reserve Bank of New Zealand trimmed rates by 25 bps but hinted the move may mark the end of its cutting cycle, triggering a sharp short-covering rally across NZD pairs and pushing NZD/USD to fresh session highs.
RBNZ signals it may be done cutting
The central bank lowered the Official Cash Rate to 2.25%, but guidance suggesting the reduction could be the last of the cycle flipped market sentiment. The kiwi rallied roughly 1.21%, leading G10 FX on the day, as traders quickly repriced the path for policy and pared expectations for further near-term easing. The reaction underscores how forward guidance can dominate headline moves: a “dovish” cut turned into a “hawkish” signal when framed as the likely end of rate reductions, according to BPayNews analysis.
Broader dollar moves were mixed, but the policy surprise and positioning skew in NZD appeared to be the primary catalysts, with risk appetite steady and FX volatility elevated around the announcement window.
Technical setup: breakout holds above pivotal retracement
Momentum accelerated after NZD/USD vaulted the 200-hour moving average (0.56317), then sliced through the 38.2% retracement of the October drop (0.56616). Buyers extended gains through the 50% midpoint and a nearby swing zone at 0.56796–0.56910, before printing an intraday peak near 0.5695.
A subsequent pullback found precise support at 0.56616, converting that level into a near-term floor. Holding above 0.56616 keeps the buyer’s edge intact. A sustained push back through 0.5691 would reassert upside momentum and open the path for additional gains.
What traders are watching
With the policy path reframed, near-term direction will likely hinge on whether NZD/USD can maintain its foothold above newly established support and whether incoming data corroborate an RBNZ pause. If risk sentiment wobbles or U.S. yields rebound, kiwi gains could consolidate; otherwise, the technical breakout favors dip-buying while the pair trades above the key retracement pivot.
Key Points
- RBNZ cuts by 25 bps to 2.25% and signals the move may be the last this cycle.
- NZD/USD up about 1.21%, leading G10 FX on the session.
- Pair broke above the 200-hour MA (0.56317) and 38.2% retracement (0.56616).
- Intraday high near 0.5695; resistance remains in the 0.56796–0.56910 zone.
- 0.56616 now pivotal support; bias stays bullish while above.
- Reclaiming 0.5691 would strengthen the upside case.
Market context
The reaction highlights how guidance can outweigh the headline rate move. By indicating limited appetite for further cuts, the RBNZ narrowed the policy divergence versus peers that remain in easing mode or are still assessing disinflation. That shift, alongside a clean technical break, invited fresh longs and squeezed shorts, particularly into light post-announcement liquidity. Traders will monitor domestic growth and inflation updates for validation of the bank’s stance, as well as global risk trends and U.S. data for broader dollar direction.
FAQ
Why did NZD/USD rally after a rate cut?
Because the RBNZ hinted the cut could be the last of the cycle, markets reduced expectations for further easing. That “less dovish” signal lifted rate differentials at the margin and sparked short covering in the kiwi.
What are the critical technical levels now?
Support is centered at the 38.2% retracement of the October decline (0.56616). Resistance sits in the 0.56796–0.56910 zone, with an intraday high near 0.5695.
What confirms further upside in NZD/USD?
A sustained break back above 0.5691 would bolster bullish momentum and keep the topside in focus, so long as price holds above 0.56616.
What could invalidate the bullish bias?
A decisive close back below 0.56616 would undermine the breakout and shift attention toward the 200-hour MA (0.56317) and lower supports.
How do global factors affect the kiwi now?
Risk sentiment and U.S. yield moves remain key. A firmer dollar or risk-off tone could cap gains, while steady equities and contained U.S. yields would support NZD dips being bought.
Last updated on November 26th, 2025 at 03:40 pm






