Read more:
• 'We said Pharmac and its purchasing model had to be protected' - Little
• John Key admits New Zealand's drugs bill will rise
Already the Labour Party has given conditional support only to the deal. It not only wants to see the fine-print but has signaled five no go areas.
At the negotiating level, broad support has been stitched up in several areas, notably constraining state-owned enterprises from using soft loans to compete against private companies.
But contentious issues critical to New Zealand's well-being are yet to be addressed.
Top of the agenda is market access for dairy.
Both Groser and John Key earlier signaled that it would be a deal-breaker for NZ if there was not a high-quality comprehensive result on this score. The position has since become more nuanced.
On TV3's The Nation's Groser said it was important as it was 25 per cent of export earnings. "It'll be a bit light this year because of fallen dairy prices, but it's typically around that. We've got very good deals shaping up in the other areas, and the deal on dairy simply isn't there yet.
"So this is the most important focus for me in the next seven or eight days. We are looking for what we call commercially meaningful access. I'm not going to be dogmatic about how to define that, but there's nothing on the table yet that allows me to recommend to the cabinet that we should sign this deal at this point."
Other prime issues include intellectual property and the treatment of state-owned enterprises.
The US is pushing aggressively to strengthen IP protections for technology, entertainment and pharmaceutical companies.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade has outlined that there will be a strong expert team including advisers on IP and dairy on hand for the negotiations.
The NZ delegation includes lead TPP negotiator David Walker who is a deputy secretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade and deputy chief negotiator Brad Burgess.
Other experts will cover rules of origin (including textiles) legal and institutional issues and government procurement.
Last week US Department of Commerce official Tami Overby identified intellectual property (IP) as the most difficult area and listed market access, SOEs, labour, environment and investment as challenging.
There is a political imperative to the negotiations.
President Barack Obama wants to get a deal in place to go before Congress prior to the presidential election.
For NZ the emphasis is not just political but economic. As Key said yesterday: "At the end of the day, TPP is going to create wealth for this country. This is 4o per cent of global GDP.
We've got to be part of this agreement, provided we can get a deal that makes net sense to New Zealand."
Time will tell whether NZ succeeds in this mission.