The kiwi is finally falling as investors move their focus back to the US economy. That's good news for exporters but bad news for consumers who have become comfortable with the high dollar making everything cheaper - from books and clothes to overseas travel
So where are we hoping the dollar will settle? Surely no one wants to see it hit lows of US38c, which it touched at the start of the millennium. Petrol above $3 a litre anyone?
But there seems to be agreement, from the Reserve Bank down, that anything over US80c is bad news for our export focused economy.
For the past few years, the kiwi and aussie dollars have been hot currencies for international investors. We have been among the only stable economies in the world that haven't resorted to printing money. Our interest rates, the yield the investors can get on a local currency, have been relatively much higher than in the US and Europe.
Markets are starting to anticipate an end to the stimulus in the US. They might be ahead of the gun and it may be some time yet before the US Federal Reserve changes policy. But we are starting to get a taste of what is in store for us when America returns to more normal policy settings.