He also said Chinese data was mixed and the market seems to have focused on the weaker aspects. China's economy expanded at 6.8 per cent in the first quarter, which was in line with expectations said Borkin. However, retail sales data was better than expected and industrial production was weaker.
The data weighed on both the kiwi and the Aussie and the New Zealand dollar traded at 94.48 Australian cents from 94.61 late yesterday.
Overall, however, "we have chopped around in very tight ranges".
Borkin said markets will now be watching for the overnight dairy auction, expected to show a slight pull back on increased supply on the platform. Key, however, this week is the first-quarter inflation data due Thursday, with economists expecting annual inflation of 1.1 per cent.
The kiwi dollar was at 51.16 British pence from 51.58 pence late yesterday and traded at 78.57 yen from 78.86 yen. It fell to 59.26 euro cents from 59.63 euro cents and declined to 4.6105 yuan from 4.6207 yuan.
New Zealand's two-year swap rate was unchanged at 2.31 per cent and the 10-year swap rate was unchanged at 3.18 per cent.