The kiwi was also helped by remarks by Finance Minister Grant Robertson who talked up the strength of the New Zealand economy on Bloomberg TV.
"The fundamentals of our economy remain strong," he said. Nor did he expect unconventional monetary policy tools would be required here.
"I don't see that happening in the short term in New Zealand. There's still a little bit more room to move in terms of monetary policy in New Zealand and my belief is that the economy will respond to not only the monetary policy work that's been done but also the fiscal policy.
"The Minister of Finance's comments on the New Zealand economy and unconventional monetary policy helped stem the currency's decline," said ANZ FX/rates strategist Sandeep Parekh.
The kiwi was also supported when global dairy prices fell less than expected, particularly whole milk powder, in the overnight auction. Whole milk powder fell 0.8 per cent to US$3,076 a tonne while the GDT price index fell 0.4 per cent. ASB Bank had tipped whole milk powder to fall 1 per cent.
The New Zealand dollar was trading at 93.63 Australian cents from 93.65, at 52.38 British pence from 52.20, at 57.70 euro cents from 57.43, at 67.15 yen from 66.79 and at 4.5448 Chinese yuan from 4.5123.
- BusinessDesk