It gained strongly after the domestic unemployment rate hit a decade-low in the third quarter of 3.9 per cent Wednesday and after Reserve Bank governor Adrian Orr Thursday held the official cash rate at 1.75 per cent.
While the RBNZ reiterated it would remain on hold until December 2020, it did omit a line from the previous statement that its next move could be "up or down," adding to the view that a rate cut was increasingly unlikely.
It pared some of those gains when the US Federal Open Market Committee reiterated it expects "further gradual increases" in the target range for the fed funds rate, giving the US dollar a lift and underscoring that while New Zealand rates may not go lower they also won't be rising any time soon.
Overall, however, the kiwi is still having its "employment honeymoon," said Martin Rudings, a senior foreign exchange dealer at OMF. "Still, by next week the market will have forgotten those numbers."
Rudings said the US dollar looks poised to rise now the uncertainty surrounding the US midterm elections has passed.
"The US dollar story is still intact ... the US has the story, they have the robust economy," he said.
The kiwi traded at 92.98 Australian cents from 93.28 cents yesterday. It was at 51.39 British pence from 51.67 pence yesterday, and at 59.59 euro cents from 59.40 euro cents. It was at 4.6747 Chinese yuan from 4.7007 yuan and at 76.65 yen from 77.04 yen.
New Zealand's two-year swap rate rose 3 basis points to 2.18 per cent; the 10-year swaps rose 1 basis points to 3.09 per cent.