The kiwi "still looks to be a sell on any rally given dovish RBNZ nuances and a US Fed that is set to stick to getting on with the job at hand," said Cameron Bagrie, chief economist at ANZ Bank New Zealand.
Today, traders in the New Zealand dollar will be watching for the Performance of Services (PMI) index for April, first-quarter retail sales and a speech by RBNZ assistant governor John McDermott about the perils of forecasting in an uncertain world.
The kiwi traded at 53.13 British pence from 53.06 pence on Friday. The local currency traded at 62.62 euro cents from 62.66 cents and fell to 77.46 yen from 77.65 yen. It declined to 92.55 Australian cents from 92.86 cents and fell to 4.7211 Chinese yuan from 4.7246 yuan.