"After such a hard sell-off last week, it's not surprising it's attracted some buying interest at these levels," said OMF private client manager Stuart Ive.
The New Zealand dollar fell sharply last week after New Zealand's central bank indicated rates would remain on hold for some time to come. The kiwi traded at 72 US cents from 71.99 cents on Friday in the US and Ive said it was likely to stick to a 71.70-to-72.20 US cent range until there were some catalysts to move it one way or the other. It was at 78.51 on a trade-weighted index basis versus 78.37 on Friday.
Ive said local traders largely overlooked news that retail spending rose a seasonally adjusted 2.7 percent in January after two months of zero movement, the biggest monthly gain since December 2006, with increases across all six industries and said Tuesday's food price index data was unlikely to have much impact.
The light data calendar means investors will continue to watch headlines out of the US for direction, and Ive there may be some signs that US President Donald Trump is "toning down" his rhetoric, which could be positive for risk. Any detail on Trump's tax-plan is also likely to shore up the greenback.
Ive noted the US dollar gained against the yen in Asian trading, after Japanese economic growth was weaker than expected and after Trump's weekend meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. The kiwi gained to 82.02 yen from 81.43 yen last week.
The local currency traded at 57.63 British pence compared with 57.49 pence in Asia on Friday and rose to 67.80 euro cents from 67.59 cents. It increased to 4.955 Chinese yuan from 4.9477 yuan.
New Zealand's two-year swap was unchanged at 2.3 percent while 10-year swaps fell 1 basis point to 3.42.