"Markets have been subdued ahead of major events scheduled later in the week," said Doug Steel, an economist at Bank of New Zealand, in a note. "Our fair value estimates and elevated risk appetite still favour the NZD higher, but it will first need to navigate Thursday's GDP data that we expect to be weaker than market expectations."
The kiwi dollar traded at 64.94 euro cents from 64.83 cents yesterday. It fell to 91.34 Australian cents from 91.61 cents. It rose to 4.7821 yuan from 4.7900 yuan and slipped to 79.45 yen from 79.61 yen. The kiwi fell to 56.60 British pence from 56.94 pence amid market talk that Britain may soon trigger Article 50 to begin the nation's exit from the European Union.