The New Zealand dollar weakened to 93.22 Australian cents from 93.40 cents yesterday after the stronger-than-expected Australian data reduced speculation Australia's central bank could cut interest rates further. Today, all eyes will be on Reserve Bank of Australia governor Glenn Stevens' testimony to a parliamentary economic committee at 11:30am New Zealand time.
In the US later today, traders will be eyeing the key non-farm payrolls report for February, which is expected to show 150,000 jobs were added during the month, up from 113,000 in January.
The local currency slipped to 61.21 euro cents from 61.36 cents yesterday after the European Central Bank indicated the chances of further policy easing are slim.
The kiwi advanced to 50.62 British pence from 50.39 pence yesterday after the Bank of England kept its policy rate and the size of its asset purchase programme unchanged.
The trade-weighted index increased to 79.34 from 79.08 yesterday. The TWI touched 79.50 overnight, just 0.2 per cent shy of its record 79.70 level from April last year, BNZ's Shareef said.
"Should US non-farm payrolls disappoint tonight, a challenge of that level would not be surprising," Shareef said.