The local currency has been a beneficiary of a weak greenback as investors weigh up which way next week's US presidential election will fall in the close run race between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.
At the same time, the Federal Reserve put off a rate hike at its latest meeting while New Zealand data has shown a labour market in good health and a strong recovery in dairy prices. That's prompted economists to pare back their expectations for the Reserve Bank's track for lower rates, with next week's meeting now seen as the end of the easing cycle.
"A rate cut next week had an 86 per cent chance priced in -- with all of the data coming out from New Zealand and Australia the market is paring back expectations for that cut," said Mitchell McIntyre, senior corporate FX dealer at NZForex in Auckland. "This is the biggest move we've seen in the kiwi for a long time."
Traders will be watching US non-farm payrolls for last month when it's released, though next week's election will continue to heighten volatility in the lead-up to NZ's Reserve Bank policy review.
The local currency edged down to A95.25c from A95.32c on Thursday after minutes to the Reserve Bank of Australia's monetary policy statement projected inflation to remain steady in the near-term, while acknowledging a stronger currency would complicate the economy's transition.
The kiwi increased to 4.9456 Chinese yuan from 4.9381 yuan on Thursday, and gained to 75.36 yen from 74.99 yen.
It fell to 58.65 British pence from 59.23p on Thursday after a British High Court ruled Prime Minister Theresa May might need parliament to ratify the Brexit vote. The kiwi rose to 65.92 euro cents from 65.70c on Thursday. BusinessDesk