After GDP disappointed, the NZD/USD fell 1.25%, broke the 200-day EMA, settling near 0.5790

    by VT Markets
    /
    Mar 19, 2026
    NZD/USD fell about 1.25% on Wednesday, briefly meeting the 200-day EMA before dropping to about 0.5790. It extended the fall from the early-February high near 0.6090 and moved below the 50-day and 200-day daily moving averages for the first time since mid-January. New Zealand Q4 GDP rose 0.2% quarter-on-quarter versus 0.4% expected and the RBNZ forecast of 0.5%. Annual growth was 1.3% versus 1.7% expected, and Q3 was revised to 0.9% from 1.1%.

    New Zealand Growth And Rbnz Outlook

    Construction weighed on output, while agriculture and tourism-related services rose. The RBNZ next meets on 8 April, with the OCR at 2.25%. In the US, the Federal Reserve held rates and kept its projection of one cut in 2026. The 2026 core inflation forecast rose to 2.7% from 2.5%, and headline PPI was 0.7% month-on-month versus 0.3% expected. NZD/USD was around 0.5788, with resistance near 0.5860 and 0.5920. Support sits at 0.5765–0.5770 near the 200-day EMA, then around 0.5700. NZD can be influenced by China’s economy, dairy prices, interest-rate settings, and New Zealand data such as growth, unemployment, and confidence. It often strengthens in risk-on markets and weakens during market stress.

    Looking Back One Year

    We recall this time last year in 2025, when the NZD/USD pair suffered a sharp decline following a significant miss in fourth-quarter GDP data. That weak economic print gave the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) reason to be patient, while the US Fed remained hawkish. The situation pushed the pair down toward its 200-day moving average. The picture today is notably different as we look at the most recent data. New Zealand’s fourth-quarter 2025 GDP figures, released yesterday, showed the economy contracted by only 0.1%, beating expectations of a 0.3% decline and showing resilience. This contrasts sharply with the disappointing growth we saw in the data from a year ago. This economic strength is giving the RBNZ little room to consider rate cuts, with policymakers holding the Official Cash Rate at 5.5% in February 2026 due to persistent domestic inflation. Meanwhile, the U.S. Federal Reserve delivered its first 25 basis point rate cut in January 2026 as inflation cooled. This growing rate differential is now providing a tailwind for the Kiwi dollar. Supporting this view, we see fundamental factors for the Kiwi have improved. Dairy prices, a key export for New Zealand, have shown strength, with the Global Dairy Trade index rising 2.8% in the first auction of March 2026. Furthermore, recent data from China, New Zealand’s largest trading partner, suggests its economy is stabilizing. Given this backdrop, the bearish technical setup we observed in March 2025 is no longer in play. The pair is trading comfortably above 0.6100, and unlike last year, the moving averages are now pointing upward. For traders, this suggests a strategy of buying on dips rather than selling into rallies. Therefore, weakness in the NZD/USD towards the 50-day moving average, currently near 0.6110, should be seen as a potential buying opportunity. We believe using call options is a prudent approach to gain upside exposure while defining risk in case of a market reversal. Looking at strikes around the 0.6250 level for April expiration could offer a favorable risk-to-reward profile. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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