"The market has stabilised overnight," said OMF senior dealer, foreign exchange, Stuart Ive. "Broadly speaking, risk came back on."
Still, while stocks rebounded in Europe and the UK, US equities reversed earlier gains as attention turned back to the potential for Federal Reserve interest rate hikes.
"If the markets all calm down then the focus comes back on the Fed raising rates," said OMF's Ive. "Whilst the kiwi dollar has gained as risk has come back on, if the US dollar starts gaining momentum again, and one can only think that that will be the case if it is likely the Fed is going to hike, then the kiwi will come under pressure again without a doubt."
Investors will be focused on the Shanghai stock market open at 1:30pm New Zealand time today, to see if it responds to the latest moves by the Chinese central bank, Ive said.
In New Zealand today, trade data for July is released at 10:45am, while the Reserve Bank releases data on high-debt mortgage lending for July at 3pm.
The New Zealand dollar advanced to 90.88 Australian cents from 90.22 cents yesterday, gained to 56.38 euro cents from 56.24 cents, edged up to 41.27 British pence from 41.18 pence, slipped to 76.95 yen from 77.68 yen, and edged lower to 4.1533 yuan from 41.1648 yuan.