The New Zealand dollar climbed to around $0.605, moving back toward a seven-month high after a two-day decline, as markets increasingly priced in expectations that the RBNZ will start raising rates later this year. Attention has now turned to labor market data due this week, with the Q4 unemployment rate expected to hold at 5.3%, its highest level since 2016, while employment is forecast to grow by 0.3%. While the data may justify delaying policy tightening until the second half of the year, above-target inflation and firming economic growth leave little doubt that the next policy move will be a rate hike. Policymakers meet on February 18, marking the first decision under new Governor Anna Breman, who is expected to outline her policy vision. Meanwhile, gains were capped by renewed strength in the US dollar after President Donald Trump nominated Kevin Warsh as Fed chair, a move markets view as hawkish and less supportive of aggressive rate cuts.
The NZD/USD exchange rate rose to 0.6039 on February 3, 2026, up 0.66% from the previous session. Over the past month, the New Zealand Dollar has strengthened 4.31%, and is up by 6.95% over the last 12 months. Historically, the New Zealand Dollar reached an all time high of 1.49 in October of 1973. New Zealand Dollar - data, forecasts, historical chart - was last updated on February 3 of 2026.
The NZD/USD exchange rate rose to 0.6039 on February 3, 2026, up 0.66% from the previous session. Over the past month, the New Zealand Dollar has strengthened 4.31%, and is up by 6.95% over the last 12 months. The New Zealand Dollar is expected to trade at 0.61 by the end of this quarter, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. Looking forward, we estimate it to trade at 0.62 in 12 months time.