The New Zealand dollar gained as markets wager new US Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell will remain measured in his first testimony this week, adding to the view that the Fed will only lift interest rates three times this year.
The New Zealand dollar rose to US73.18c at 5pm from US72.85c at 8am and US72.88c on Friday in New York. The trade-weighted index was at 75 versus 74.84.
Powell will testify before the House of Representatives and Senate committees this week in his first semi-annual testimony on the monetary policy report, which was released on Friday and any comments will be closely scrutinised for any clues on where US interest rates might head this year.
Last week the US dollar pushed higher when minutes from the latest US Federal Reserve rate-setting committee meeting showed growing confidence in the need to keep raising interest rates at its last policy meeting, with most believing that inflation would perk up. That led some market participants to speculate about four possible rate increases this year.
However, Friday's monetary policy report helped shore up expectations the Fed will tighten gradually, leading the yield on the 10-year US Treasuries to pull back to about 2.86 per cent, well off the four-year high of 2.96 per cent, and leading the market to once again focus on three possible rate increases.