"We should start to see headlines across the wires from that but I don't think we will see any concrete resolutions," Jones said.
Despite falling, the Kiwi dollar is still "massively overvalued", said John Walley, chief executive of the New Zealand Manufacturers and Exporters Association.
Walley said the dollar needs to keep sliding before exporters will see any real benefits.
"It's good for confidence but it's probably not showing on the income statements yet.
"It will start really showing in a month or so, as long as you keep seeing that downward drift of the dollar."
Walley said consumers have "had it good" with the high dollar and it was about time exporters got a break.
Traders will be eyeing the first meeting between new French President Fraincois Hollande and German chancellor Angela Merkel on Wednesday. Hollande, Nicolas Sarkozy's successor, has already distanced himself from the region's austerity push.
A data heavy week kicked off in Europe with industrial production figures unexpectedly declining in March. Production in the 17-nation euro area slipped 0.3 per cent in March, when compared with a month earlier. Economist had forecast a 0.4 per cent increase, according to a Bloomberg survey.
Euro-zone gross domestic product is set for release on Tuesday, while inflation, trade balance and unemployment figures are due out on Wednesday.
In the world's largest economy, the US, consumer prices and retail sales are due out today.
In New Zealand's largest export market, Australia, the Reserve Bank will release minutes from its May meeting today. The RBA slashed half a percentage point from its benchmark interest rate to 3.75 per cent, citing a persistently high currency and slowing output growth.
There is no significant data scheduled for release in New Zealand today.
The New Zealand dollar was unchanged on 60.59 euro cents from 5pm yesterday. The kiwi fell to 77.79 Australian cents from 78.04 cents and slipped to 48.31 pence from 48.65 British pence. It dropped to 62.08 yen from 62.53 yen.