The US dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies, has retraced some of the gains it made following a report showing the US economy expanded at a 2.8 per cent annual pace in the third quarter, ahead of the 2.0 per cent rate expected in a Reuters poll of economists and the strongest gain in 12 months.
Traders are awaiting a key October jobs report in the US today which will show how the economy weathered the partial government shutdown in the first half of the month.
"The currency market is a little bit flighty, probably in large part because we have got US non-farm payrolls due tonight and that always keeps traders a little bit wary," said BNZ's Jones. "The kiwi is chopping around in a sideways range at the moment we really have to wait and see what those numbers bring tonight."
Economists expect the US economy added 120,000 jobs with small increase in unemployment rate to 7.3 per cent.
This afternoon, traders will be eyeing data from China on October imports, exports and the trade balance to see if previous signs of weakness in exports continued, BNZ's Jones said. Softer figures may weigh on the kiwi.
Over the weekend, data is due on Chinese inflation, industrial production, and retail sales. US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is also scheduled to speak at the International Monetary Fund.
The kiwi was little changed at 88.10 Australian cents from 88.17 cents yesterday ahead of the Reserve Bank of Australia Statement of Monetary Policy today. The RBA kept the key rate unchanged on Tuesday.
The New Zealand dollar slipped to 51.77 British pence from 51.93 pence yesterday after the Bank of England kept its benchmark interest rate on hold. The kiwi declined to 81.55 yen from 82.31 yen yesterday and the trade-weighted index edged lower to 77.51 from 77.62.