"They have been very specific about the timetable, that they want zero additional asset purchases by the middle of next year," said OM Financial's Morgan. "At the moment there is US$85 billion a month so you have got to wind down by about US$10 billion a month even if they start now. I would expect US$10-$15 billion a month being announced in September."
Fed San Francisco president John Williams, considered a dove, is the last Fed official scheduled to speak tonight, ahead of a blackout period leading into the central bank's next meeting, Westpac Banking Corp market strategist Imre Speizer said in a note.
Traders are eyeing potential western military action in Syria as US Secretary of State John Kerry tries to muster support for US action ahead of an expected vote in Congress this week.
Kerry, speaking after a meeting with Arab foreign ministers, said Saudi Arabia backs a strike and others will soon declare their support. Still, Russian president Vladimir Putin has said Russia will maintain its long-standing military and economic support for the Syrian president.
OM Financial's Morgan said he believes a strike on Syria "is not imminent."
In New Zealand today, reports are due on second quarter manufacturing and house values.
The New Zealand dollar rose to 86.92 Australian cents at 8am in Wellington from 86.61 cents at 5pm on Friday after Australia's Liberal-National Party coalition ousted the Labor Party at the weekend's Federal election.
The Aussie is trading above the key 92 US cent level and may bounce as high as 95 US cents before declining, said OM Financial's Morgan.
The kiwi advanced to 79.79 yen from 78.96 yen on Friday ahead of reports on second quarter growth and balance of payments today and as a decision looms on increasing consumption tax next year.
"The yen is going to continue to remain weak," said OM Financial's Morgan. "If you start to see any strength in the yen, the Bank of Japan and the Japanese government will take action to make sure that is only a limited and a temporary effect."
The local currency rose to 60.81 euro cents from 60.25 cents and gained to 51.22 British pence from 50.67 pence.