"While some from offshore have speculated that the RBNZ will join in the chorus of central banks changing their bias and indicating removal of policy accommodation, we don't believe that will happen anytime soon," said Jason Wong, currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand, in a note. "If anything, inflation is tracking below the RBNZ's May projections, and next week's CPI data should confirm that."
Westpac Banking Corp economists expect inflation slowed to just 0.1 per cent in the second quarter, after a 1 per cent spike in the first quarter, slowing the annual rate to 1.8 per cent. That would be lower than the Reserve Bank's latest forecasts of 0.3 per cent and 2.1 per cent respectively.
"We expect the OCR to remain unchanged until 2019, in contrast to market expectations of a rate hike by mid-2018," said Michael Gordon, Westpac's acting chief economist, in a note.
Locally, the manufacturing PMI for June is due out today and on Friday in the US, investors will be watching for the June consumers price index and retail sales. US CPI is forecast to rise 0.1 percent month on month, after falling 0.1 per cent a month earlier.
The kiwi fell to 64.23 euro cents from 63.69 cents late yesterday and rose to 82.92 yen from 82.36 yen. It gained to 4.9661 yuan from 4.9385 yuan and traded at 56.56 British pence from 56.47 pence. The kiwi traded at 94.71 Australian cents from 94.62 cents.