"There's been a bit of short covering ahead of the RBNZ. A lot of the market would have gone home short going into the weekend with the Malaysian airline disaster, thinking it would ratchet up over the weekend. It did but not to the degree expected."
"The kiwi is still very high and longer term it is going to go down," he said. "Short term it depends what the Reserve Bank does on Thursday."
On balance, the New Zealand dollar may fall this week, based on a BusinessDesk survey of 10 traders and strategists published today. Five see a decline, four predict a gain and one sees the kiwi little changed. The range may be 85 US cents and 88.50 cents. The Reserve Bank will be a key event, with many market participants unwilling to bet on the pace of rate hikes after this week even though this week's move is priced into the currency.
The kiwi didn't move much after government figures showed the country gained a net 38,300 migrants in the year through June, the highest since October 2003 and just above the peak for the year seen by the Treasury and Reserve Bank.
The New Zealand dollar rose to 92.74 Australian cents from 92.67 cents on Friday and traded at 64.33 euro cents from 64.15 cents. It rose to 50.94 British pence from 50.72 pence and gained to 88.16 yen from 87.92 yen on Friday. Japanese banks are closed today in observance of Marine Day.