He said there are some key developments this week that will help determine direction, pointing to the Reserve Bank of Australia's rate decision Tuesday, followed by domestic jobs data Wednesday and US manufacturing data and jobs data. Investors are also awaiting speeches by Cleveland Federal Reserve President Loretta Mester and San Francisco Fed President John Williams this week for further clues about the Fed's plans.
"You could argue that sentiment is so bearish the US dollar right that perhaps the risk is that if we start to see some positive surprises you could start to see some love return to the US dollar but it's a brave call to make at the moment," said Borkin.
The kiwi traded at 94.06 Australian cents from 94.05 cents in New York on Friday and traded at 63.95 euro cents from 63.97 cents. It was at 82.96 yen from 83.09 yen, traded at 57.16 British pence from 57.21 pence and fell to 5.0495 yuan from 5.0596 yuan.
New Zealand's two-year swap rate was unchanged at 2.21 per cent while the 10-year swaps rose 1 basis point to 3.28 per cent.