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Yesterday’s trade saw NZD/USD within the range of 0.6295-0.6351. The pair closed at 0.6331, up 0.16% on a daily basis and extending gains from Friday. The daily high has also been the highest level since September 10th, when the cross registered a high of 0.6400.

At 8:58 GMT today NZD/USD was down 0.08% for the day to trade at 0.6325. The pair tested the lower range breakout level (S4), as it touched a daily low at 0.6300 at 6:50 GMT.

Today the cross may be influenced by a number of macroeconomic reports as listed below.

Fundamentals

New Zealand

Current account

New Zealands current account probably produced a deficit of USD 1.50 billion during the second quarter of the year, according to the median forecast by experts. If so, it would be the smallest deficit since Q2 2014, when a figure of USD 1.081 billion was reported. In Q1 the nations current account had a surplus at the amount of USD 0.66 billion.

The current account reflects the difference between a country’s savings and its investments. It is the sum of the balance of trade, net current transfers (cash transfers) and net income from abroad (earnings from investments made abroad plus money sent by individuals working abroad to their families back home, minus payments made to foreign investors).

A current account surplus indicates that a country’s net foreign assets have increased by the respective amount, while a deficit suggests the opposite. A country with a surplus on its current account is considered as a net lender to the rest of the world, while a current account deficit puts it in the position of a net borrower. A net lender is consuming less than it is producing, which means it is saving and those savings are being invested abroad, or foreign assets are created. A net borrower is consuming more than it is producing, which means that other countries are lending it their savings, or foreign liabilities are created. Therefore, an expanding surplus or a contracting deficit on the New Zealands current account may have a limited bullish effect on the local dollar. Statistics New Zealand is to release the official figure at 22:45 GMT.

United States

Retail sales

Retail sales in the United States probably rose 0.4% in August on a monthly basis, according to the median forecast by experts. In July sales were up another 0.6%, while the June performance was revised up to flat from a 0.3% decrease previously.

Among the 13 major categories, 10 registered increases, while 1 showed no change. Sales at online stores marked the largest monthly increase in July (up 1.5%), followed by sales of motor vehicles (up 1.4%), sales at sporting goods, hobby, music and books stores (up 0.9%), sales at furniture stores (up 0.8%), sales of building materials and garden equipment (up 0.7%) and sales at food services & drinking places (up 0.7%). On the other hand, sales in general merchandise stores were 0.5% lower in July, while sales at electronics & appliance stores dropped 1.2%, according to the report by the US Census Bureau.

Annualized retail sales surged 2.4% in July, or at the fastest rate since January 2015, following a 1.4% climb in June.

US core retail sales, or retail sales ex autos, probably went up 0.3% in August compared to a month ago. If so, this would be the most modest monthly rate of increase since April 2015. In July core sales rose 0.4%. This indicator removes large ticket prices and historical seasonality of automobile sales.

The report on retail sales reflects the dollar value of merchandise sold within the retail trade by taking a sampling of companies, operating in the sector of selling physical end products to consumers. The retail sales report encompasses both fixed point-of-sale businesses and non-store retailers, such as mail catalogs and vending machines. The Census Bureau, which is a part of the Department of Commerce, surveys about 5 000 companies of all sizes, from huge retailers such as Wal-Mart to independent small family firms.

The retail sales index is considered as a coincident indicator, thus, it reflects the current state of the economy. It is also considered a pre-inflationary indicator, which investors can use in order to reassess the probability of an interest rate hike or cut by the Federal Reserve Bank. In addition, this indicator provides key information regarding consumer spending trends. Consumer expenditures, on the other hand, account for almost two-thirds of the US Gross Domestic Product. Therefore, a larger-than-expected rate of increase in sales would have a strong bullish effect on the US dollar. The official report is due out at 12:30 GMT.

Industrial Production, Capacity Utilization

Industrial output in the United States probably shrank for the first time in three months in August, down at a monthly rate of 0.2%, according to market expectations. In July industrial production grew 0.6%, or at the sharpest monthly pace since November 2014, when the index surged 1.3%. Manufacturing production, which accounts for almost three quarters of total industrial production, expanded 0.8% in July, or at the fastest monthly rate since November last year. The index for mining went up 0.2% in July, after a 0.7% climb in June. The output of utilities slumped 1.0% in July, following a 2.3% increase in the prior month.

The index of industrial production reflects the change in overall inflation-adjusted value of output in the three major sectors mentioned above. The index is sensitive to consumer demand and interest rates. As such, industrial production is an important tool for future GDP and economic performance forecasts. Those figures are also used to measure inflation by central banks as very high levels of industrial production may lead to uncontrolled levels of consumption and rapid inflation. It is a coincident indicator, which means that changes in its levels generally echo similar shifts in overall economic activity. On the other hand, a larger-than-projected monthly decline in the index would usually have a moderate bearish effect on the US dollar.

The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve is to release the production data at 13:15 GMT.

In addition, Capacity Utilization rate in the country probably decreased to 77.8% in August from 78.0% in July. If so, this would be the lowest utilization rate since July 2013, when a rate of 77.6% was reported. This indicator represents the optimal rate for a stable production process, or the highest possible level of production in an enterprise, in case it operates within a realistic work schedule and has sufficient raw materials and inventories at its disposal. High rates of capacity utilization usually lead to inflationary pressure. In general, lower-than-anticipated rates tend to have a limited bearish effect on the US dollar.

Bond Yield Spread

The yield on New Zealands 2-year government bonds went as high as 2.485% on September 14th, after which it slid to 2.455% at the close to lose 2 basis points (0.02 percentage point) compared to September 11th. It has been a third consecutive trading day of decline.

The yield on US 2-year government bonds climbed as high as 0.734% on September 14th, after which it fell to 0.730% at the close to add 2.1 basis points (0.021 percentage point) for the day. It has been the first gain in the past three trading days.

The spread between 2-year New Zealand and 2-year US bond yields, which reflects the flow of funds in a short term, shrank to 1.725% on September 14th from 1.766% on September 11th. The September 14th yield spread has been the lowest one in more than three months.

Meanwhile, the yield on New Zealands 10-year government bonds soared as high as 3.305% on September 14th, after which it slid to 3.275% at the close to depreciate 2 basis points (0.02 percentage point) compared to September 11th, while marking a third straight day of decline.

The yield on US 10-year government bonds climbed as high as 2.203% on September 14th, after which it slipped to 2.187% at the close to remain unchanged compared to September 11th.

The spread between 10-year New Zealand and 10-year US bond yields narrowed to 1.088% on September 14th from 1.108% on September 11th. The September 14th yield difference has been the lowest one since September 10th, when the spread was 1.083%.

Daily and Weekly Pivot Levels

nzd-usd 30min

By employing the Camarilla calculation method, the daily pivot levels for NZD/USD are presented as follows:

R1 – 0.6336
R2 – 0.6341
R3 (range resistance) – 0.6346
R4 (range breakout) – 0.6362

S1 – 0.6326
S2 – 0.6321
S3 (range support) – 0.6316
S4 (range breakout) – 0.6300

By using the traditional method of calculation, the weekly pivot levels for NZD/USD are presented as follows:

Central Pivot Point – 0.6330
R1 – 0.6418
R2 – 0.6520
R3 – 0.6608

S1 – 0.6228
S2 – 0.6140
S3 – 0.6038

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