Meanwhile, headlines that the German government is ready to deliver fiscal stimulus by boosting deficit spending should a recession hit saw the bund selloff on Friday, and added to fears that economies globally are slowing.
ANZ senior economic Miles Workman said that given the German economy already contracted in the second quarter and forward looking indicators are soft "it's no wonder recession fears are elevated."
He noted that New Zealand has plenty of fiscal headroom should the government choose to use it. "With a few recession warnings now being triggered across the globe, now seems like a good time to start planning on how best to deliver," he said.
Looking ahead, markets will be watching for today's BNZ-BusinessNZ performance of services index followed by minutes from the US Federal Reserve Wednesday in the US.
The New Zealand dollar was trading at 94.64 Australian cents from 94.78, at 52.93 British pence from 52.91, at 58.00 euro cents from 57.94, at 68.48 yen from 68.39 and at 4.5297 Chinese yuan from 4.5276.