"If you have the expected result though it won't have too much effect on the market," he said.
The kiwi dollar's weakness comes as the pound fell to a seven-week low against the US dollar after German Chancellor Angela Merkel said joint Euro bonds would send the "wrong signal," spooking already fragile investor confidence.
Merkel said she remained opposed to joint euro bonds, damping optimism the policy would help resolve the debt crisis, Bloomberg reported.
Earlier this week, Germany failed to find buyers for 35 per cent of the 6 billion euros of government bonds it put up for sale. The failed auction underpinned concerns Europe's debt crisis is driving away investors from the region.
Trading is expected to be thing over the next day with US markets closed for the Thanksgiving holiday. BNZ's Burrowes said the markets are using it as an "excuse to have a breather," with no international data scheduled for release across the weekend it should be quite globally.
New Zealand has no major data scheduled for release today either.
The Kiwi dollar fell to 76.15 Australian cents from 76.32 yesterday and declined to 57.18 yen from 57.28 yen. It was little changed at 55.58 euro cents from 55.57 euro cents and increased to 47.84 British pence from 47.79 yesterday.
The trade weighted index declined to 66.36 from 66.47 yesterday.