The Reserve Bank of New Zealand's view that the kiwi dollar is set to fall further has reduced prospects of a cut in an official cash rate that is already at a record low, economists say.
In its latest financial stability report, the Reserve Bank said New Zealand's currency may fall because of "deterioration in market sentiment or a more marked fall in commodity prices".
The kiwi has "increased strongly" since November, with large economies printing money and investors favouring higher-yielding assets. Last week, the New Zealand dollar dropped below 80 US cents for the first time since January.
"The decline in the New Zealand dollar has removed some of that pressure and it highlights a rate cut is unlikely in the current environment," said Jane Turner, economist at ASB Institutional.
Traders are pricing in 33 basis points worth of cuts to the official cash rate over the next 12 months, based on the Overnight Index Swap curve.