- NZD/USD has rebounded to close to 0.6250 after hitting its lowest since June 2020 on Tuesday.
- Traders are focused on imminent US Retail Sales data and the upcoming Fed policy announcement.
A bout of pre-US Retail Sales data and Fed policy announcement meeting weakness in the US dollar, that seems partially driven by a modest improvement in risk appetite as European equities rebound from Tuesday’s multi-month lows and global yields pare back from highs, is boosting NZD/USD in pre-US open Wednesday trade. The pair was last trading higher by about 0.7% in the 0.6250 region, a little over 50 pips higher versus Tuesday’s lows just under 0.6200, which was the lowest the pair has been since June 2020.
Amid a lack of major macro updates, traders have their attention fixated on Wednesday’s economic calendar. US Retail Sales figures for May are due at 1230GMT and will be viewed in the context of rising US recession fears. Given that inflation in the US is so bad (as per last week’s inflation figures), bad data is unlikely to be interpreted as good for risk appetite as the Fed doesn’t have the room to be more dovish to support growth.
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