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US Dollar Price Annual Forecast: Will 2026 be a Year of Transition?

20 December 2025 at 11:06

The US Dollar (USD) enters the new year at a crossroads. After several years of sustained strength driven by US growth outperformance, aggressive Federal Reserve (Fed) tightening, and recurrent episodes of global risk aversion, the conditions that underpinned broad-based USD appreciation are beginning to erode, but not collapse. 

FXStreet predicts the coming year is better characterised as a transition phase rather than a clean regime shift.

A Transitional Year for USD

The 2026 base case is for a moderate softening of the Greenback, led by high-beta and undervalued currencies, as interest-rate differentials narrow and global growth becomes less asymmetric.

The Fed is expected to move cautiously towards policy easing, but the bar for aggressive rate cuts remains high. Sticky services inflation, a resilient labour market, and expansionary fiscal policy argue against a rapid normalisation of US monetary settings.

US Dollar Index Over the Past Decade. Source: Macro Trends

In the FX galaxy, this implies selective opportunities rather than a wholesale US Dollar bear market. 

Near-term risks include renewed US fiscal brinkmanship, with shutdown risk more likely to generate episodic volatility and defensive USD demand than a lasting shift in the Dollar’s trend. 

Looking further ahead, the approaching end of Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s term in May introduces an additional source of uncertainty, with markets beginning to assess whether a future Fed leadership transition could eventually tilt policy in a more dovish direction. 

Overall, the year ahead is less about calling the end of Dollar dominance and more about navigating a world in which the USD is less irresistible but still indispensable. 

US Dollar in 2025: From Exceptionalism to Exhaustion?

The past year was not defined by a single shock but by a steady sequence of moments that kept testing, and ultimately reaffirming, the US Dollar’s resilience. 

It began with a confident consensus that US growth would slow and that the Fed would soon pivot towards easier policy.

That call proved premature, as the US economy remained stubbornly resilient. It activity held up, inflation cooled only slowly, and the labour market stayed tight enough to keep the Fed cautious. 

Inflation became the second recurring fault line. Headline pressures eased, but progress was uneven, particularly in services.

Every upside surprise reopened the debate about how restrictive policy really needed to be, and each time the result looked familiar: a firmer Dollar and a reminder that the disinflation process was not yet complete. 

Geopolitics added a constant background hum. Tensions in the Middle East, the war in Ukraine, and fragile US-China relations – namely on the trade front – regularly unsettled markets. 

Outside the US, there was little to challenge that setup: Europe struggled to generate clear momentum, China’s recovery failed to convince, and relative growth underperformance elsewhere capped the scope for sustained Dollar weakness.

And then there’s the Trump factor: Politics has mattered less as a clean directional driver for the Dollar and more as a source of recurring volatility.

As the timeline below shows, periods of heightened policy or geopolitical uncertainty have typically been moments when the currency benefited from its safe-haven role. 

Trump Timeline

Moving into 2026, that pattern is unlikely to change. The Trump presidency is more likely to influence FX through bursts of uncertainty around trade, fiscal policy, or institutions than through a predictable policy path. 

Federal Reserve Policy: Cautious Easing, not a Pivot

The Fed policy remains the single most important anchor for the US Dollar outlook. Markets are increasingly confident that the peak in the policy rate is behind us. 

Still, expectations for the pace and depth of easing remain fluid and somewhat over-optimistic. 

Inflation has clearly moderated, but the final leg of disinflation is proving stubborn, with both headline and core Consumer Price Index (CPI) growth still above the bank’s 2.0% goal.

Services inflation remains elevated, wage growth is only slowly cooling, and financial conditions have eased materially. The labour market, while no longer overheating, remains resilient by historical standards. 

US Inflation Performance Since 2022

Against this backdrop, the Fed is likely to cut rates gradually and conditionally, rather than embark on an aggressive easing cycle.

From an FX perspective, this matters because rate differentials are unlikely to compress as rapidly as markets currently expect. 

The implication is that USD weakness driven by Fed easing is likely to be orderly rather than explosive. 

Fiscal Dynamics and the Political Cycle 

US fiscal policy remains a familiar complication for the Dollar outlook. Large deficits, rising debt issuance, and a deeply polarised political environment are no longer temporary features of the cycle; they are part of the landscape. 

There is a clear tension at work. 

On the one hand, expansive fiscal policy continues to support growth, delays any meaningful slowdown, and indirectly props up the Dollar by reinforcing US outperformance.

On the other hand, the steady increase in Treasury issuance raises obvious questions about debt sustainability and how long global investors will remain willing to absorb an ever-growing supply. 

Markets have been remarkably relaxed about the so-called “twin deficits” thus far. Demand for US assets remains strong, drawn by liquidity, yield, and the absence of credible alternatives at scale.

Politics adds another layer of uncertainty.

Election years – with midterms in November 2026 – tend to increase risk premia and introduce short-term volatility into FX markets. 

The recent government shutdown serves as a prime example: despite the US government resuming operations after 43 days, the main issue remains unresolved. 

Lawmakers have pushed the next funding deadline to January 30, keeping the risk of another standoff firmly on the radar. 

Valuation and Positioning: Crowded, but Not Broken 

From a valuation standpoint, the US Dollar is no longer cheap, but neither does it screen as wildly stretched. Valuation alone, however, has rarely been a reliable trigger for major turning points in the Dollar cycle. 

Positioning tells a more intriguing story: Speculative positioning has swung decisively, with USD net shorts now sitting at multi-year highs. In other words, a meaningful portion of the market has already positioned for further Dollar weakness.

That does not invalidate the bearish case, but it does change the risk profile. With positioning increasingly one-sided, the hurdle for sustained USD downside rises, while the risk of short-covering rallies grows.


This matters particularly in an environment still prone to policy surprises and geopolitical stress. 

Put together, a relatively rich valuation and heavy short positioning argue less for a clean Dollar bear market and more for a choppier ride, with periods of weakness regularly interrupted by sharp and sometimes uncomfortable counter-trend moves.

US Dollar Index Against Net Position on Open Interest

Geopolitics and Safe-Haven Dynamics 

Geopolitics remains one of the quieter but more reliable sources of support for the US Dollar. 

Rather than one dominant geopolitical shock, markets are dealing with a steady build-up of tail risks. 

Tensions in the Middle East remain unresolved, the war in Ukraine continues to weigh on Europe, and US-China relations are fragile at best. Add in disruptions to global trade routes and a renewed focus on strategic competition, and the background level of uncertainty stays elevated. 

None of this means the Dollar should be permanently bid. But taken together, these risks reinforce a familiar pattern: when uncertainty rises and liquidity is suddenly in demand, the USD continues to benefit disproportionately from safe-haven flows. 

Outlook for the major currency pairs 

EUR/USD: The Euro (EUR) should find some support as cyclical conditions improve and energy-related fears fade. That said, Europe’s deeper structural challenges haven’t gone away. Weak trend growth, limited fiscal flexibility, and an European Central Bank (ECB) that is likely to ease earlier than the Fed all cap the upside.

USD/JPY: Japan’s gradual move away from ultra-loose policy should help the Japanese Yen (JPY) at the margin, but the yield gap with the US remains wide, and the risk of official intervention is never far away. Expect plenty of volatility, two-way risk, and sharp tactical moves, rather than anything that resembles a smooth, sustained trend.

GBP/USD: The Pound Sterling (GBP) continues to face a tough backdrop. Trend growth is weak, fiscal headroom is limited, and politics remains a source of uncertainty. Valuation helps at the margin, but the UK still lacks a clear cyclical tailwind.

USD/CNY: China’s policy stance remains firmly focused on stability, not reflation. Depreciation pressures on the Renminbi (CNY) haven’t disappeared, but authorities are unlikely to tolerate sharp or disorderly moves. That approach limits the risk of broader USD strength spilling over through Asia, but it also caps the upside for emerging-market FX tied closely to China’s cycle. 

Commodity FX: The likes of the Australian Dollar (AUD), Canadian Dollar (CAD), and Norwegian Krone (NOK) should benefit when risk sentiment improves and commodity prices stabilise. Even so, any gains are likely to be uneven and highly sensitive to Chinese data.

Scenarios and Risks for 2026 

In the base case (60% probability), the Dollar gradually loses some ground as interest-rate differentials narrow and global growth becomes less uneven. This is a world of steady adjustment rather than a sharp reversal. 

A more bullish outcome for the USD (around 25%), would be driven by familiar forces: inflation proving stickier than expected, Fed rate cuts being pushed further out (or no cuts at all), or a geopolitical shock that revives demand for safety and liquidity. 

The bearish Dollar scenario carries a lower probability, around 15%. It would require a cleaner global growth recovery and a more decisive Fed easing cycle, enough to materially erode the buck’s yield advantage. 

Another source of uncertainty sits around the Fed itself. With Chief Powell’s term ending in May, markets are likely to start focusing on who comes next well before any actual change takes place. 

A perception that a successor might lean more dovish could gradually weigh on the Dollar by eroding confidence in US real yield support. As with much of the current outlook, the impact is likely to be uneven and time-dependent rather than a clean directional shift.

Taken together, the risks remain tilted towards episodic bouts of Dollar strength, even if the broader direction of travel points modestly lower over time. 

US Dollar Technical Analysis

From a technical standpoint, the Dollar’s recent pullback still looks more like a pause within a broader range than the start of a decisive trend reversal, at least when viewed through the lens of the US Dollar Index. 

Step back to the weekly and monthly charts, and the picture becomes clearer: the DXY remains comfortably above its pre-pandemic levels, with buyers continuing to appear whenever stress returns to the system. 

On the downside, the first key area to watch is around the 96.30 region, which marks roughly three-year lows. A clean break below that zone would be meaningful, bringing the long-term 200-month moving average just above 92.00 back into play. 

Below there, the sub-90.00 area, last tested around the 2021 lows, would mark the next major line in the sand. 

On the topside, the 100-week moving average near 103.40 stands out as the first serious hurdle. A move through that level would reopen the

door towards the 110.00 area, last reached in early January 2025. Once (and if) the latter is cleared, the post-pandemic peak near 114.80, which emerged in late 2022, could start to take shape on the horizon. 

Taken together, the technical picture fits neatly with the broader macro story. There is room for further downside, but it is unlikely to be smooth or uncontested. 

Indeed, the technicals point to a DXY that remains range-bound, paying attention to shifts in sentiment, and prone to sharp counter-moves rather than a clean, one-directional decline. 

US Dollar Index (DXY) weekly chart 

Conclusion: The End of the Peak, not the Privilege

The year ahead is unlikely to mark the end of the US Dollar’s central role in the global financial system. 

Instead, it represents the end of a particularly favourable phase in which growth, policy, and geopolitics aligned perfectly in its favour. 

As these forces slowly rebalance, the Greenback should lose some altitude, but not its relevance. For investors and policymakers alike, the challenge will be to distinguish between cyclical pullbacks and structural turning points. 

The former is far more likely than the latter.

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US CPI in Focus as Investors Weigh Fed’s January Rate Outlook

18 December 2025 at 13:33

The United States (US) Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) will publish the all-important Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for November on Thursday at 13:30 GMT. 

The inflation report will not include CPI figures for October and will not offer monthly CPI prints for November due to a lack of data collection during the government shutdown. Hence, investors will scrutinize the annual CPI and core CPI prints to assess how inflation dynamics could influence the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) policy outlook. 

What to expect in the next CPI data report? 

As measured by the change in the CPI, inflation in the US is expected to rise at an annual rate of 3.1% in November, mildly above September’s reading. The core CPI inflation, which excludes the volatile food and energy categories, is also forecast to rise 3% in this period. 

TD Securities analysts expect annual inflation to rise at a stronger pace than anticipated, but see the core inflation holding steady.

“We look for the US CPI to rise 3.2% y/y in November – its fastest pace since 2024. The increase will be driven by rising energy prices, as we look for the core CPI to remain steady at 3.0%,” they explain. 

How could the US Consumer Price Index report affect the US Dollar? 

Heading into the US inflation showdown on Thursday, investors see a nearly 20% probability of another 25-basis-point Fed rate cut in January, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. 

The BLS’ delayed official employment report showed on Tuesday that Nonfarm Payrolls declined by 105,000 in October and rose by 64,000 in November. Additionally, the Unemployment Rate climbed to 4.6% from 4.4% in September. These figures failed to alter the market pricing of the January Fed decision, as the sharp decline seen in payrolls in October was not surprising, given the loss of government jobs during the shutdown.

In a blog post published late Tuesday, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic argued that the mixed jobs report did not change the policy outlook and added that there are “multiple surveys” that suggest there are higher input costs and that firms are determined to preserve their margins by increasing prices. 

A noticeable increase, with a print of 3.3% or higher, in the headline annual CPI inflation, could reaffirm a Fed policy hold in January and boost the US Dollar (USD) with the immediate reaction. On the flip side, a soft annual inflation print of 2.8% or lower could cause market participants to lean toward a January Fed rate cut. In this scenario, the USD could come under heavy selling pressure with the immediate reaction. 

Eren Sengezer, European Session Lead Analyst at FXStreet, offers a brief technical outlook for the US Dollar Index (DXY) and explains: 

“The near-term technical outlook suggests that the bearish bias remains intact for the USD Index, but there are signs pointing to a loss in negative momentum. The Relative Strength Index (RSI) indicator on the daily chart recovers above 40 and the USD Index holds above the Fibonacci 50% retracement of the September-November uptrend.”

“The 100-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) aligns as a pivot level at 98.60. In case the USD Index rises above this level and confirms it as support, technical sellers could be discouraged. In this scenario, the Fibonacci 38.2% retracement could act as the next resistance level at 98.85 ahead of the 99.25-99.40 region, where the 200-day SMA and the Fibonacci 23.6% retracement are located.” 

“On the downside, the Fibonacci 61.8% retracement level forms a key support level at 98.00 before 97.40 (Fibonacci 78.6% retracement) and 97.00 (round level).”

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Bitcoin Weekly Forecast: Fed Delivers, Yet Fails to Impress BTC Traders

13 December 2025 at 09:50

Bitcoin (BTC) continues to trade within the recent consolidation phase, hovering around $90,000 at the time of writing on Friday, as investors digest the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) cautious December rate cut and its implications for risk assets. 

BTC price action approaches a key descending trendline that could determine its next directional move. Meanwhile, institutional flows into Spot Bitcoin ETFs showed mild inflows, and Strategy added more BTC to its treasury reserve.

Fed’s Policy Tone Triggers Consolidation in Bitcoin

Bitcoin price started the week on a positive note, extending its weekend recovery during the first half of the week and holding above $92,600 on Tuesday. 

However, momentum softened on Wednesday, with BTC closing at $92,015 after the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. 

In a widely expected move, the Fed lowered interest rates by 25 basis points. But the FOMC meeting signaled a likely pause in January. 

Adding to the cautious tone, policymakers projected only a one-quarter-percentage-point cut for the overall 2026 outlook. This was the same outlook as in September, which tempered market expectations of two rate cuts and contributed to short-term pressure on risk assets. 

The Fed’s cautious tone, combined with disappointing Oracle earnings, contributed to a brief risk-off move. 

All these factors weighed on riskier assets, with the largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization sliding to a low of $89,260 before rebounding and finishing above $92,500 on Thursday. 

With no major US data releases ahead, crypto markets will now look to FOMC member speeches and broader risk sentiment for direction

at the end of the week. 

BTC is likely to consolidate in the near term unless a significant catalyst emerges. 

Russia-Ukraine Uncertainty Limits Risk-on Momentum 

On the geopolitical front, US President Donald Trump is “extremely frustrated” with Russia and Ukraine, and he doesn’t want any more talk, his spokeswoman said on Thursday. 

Earlier, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that the US was pushing the country to cede land to Russia as part of an agreement to end a nearly four-year war. 

These lingering geopolitical tensions and stalled peace talks continue to weigh on global risk sentiment, limiting risk-on appetite and contributing to Bitcoin’s consolidation so far this week

Institutional Demand Sees Mild Signs of Improvement 

Institutional demand for Bitcoin shows mild signs of improvement. 

According to SoSoValue data, US-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded a total inflow of $237.44 million through Thursday, following a mild outflow of $87.77 million a week earlier, signaling that institutional investor interest improved somewhat. 

However, these weekly inflows remain small relative to those observed in mid-September. For BTC to continue its recovery, the ETF inflows should intensify. 

Total Bitcoin Spot ETF Net Inflow Chart. Source: SoSoValue 

On the corporate front, Strategy Inc. (MSTR) announced on Monday that it purchased 10,624 Bitcoin for $962.7 million between December 1 and 7 at an average price of $90,615. 

The firm currently holds 660,624 BTC, valued at $49.35 billion. Strategy still retains substantial capacity to raise additional capital, potentially allowing for further large-scale Bitcoin accumulation. 

On-Chain Data Shows Easing Selling Pressure 

CryptoQuant’s weekly report on Wednesday highlights that selling pressure on Bitcoin is beginning to ease.

The report notes that exchange deposits eased as large players reduced their transfers to exchanges. 

The graph below shows that the share of total deposits from large players has declined from a 24-hour average high of 47% in mid-November to 21% as of Wednesday. 

At the same time, the average deposit has declined by 36%, from 1.1 BTC in November 22 to 0.7 BTC. 

Bitcoin Exchange Flows. Source: CryptoQuant

CryptoQuant concludes that, if selling pressure remains low, a relief rally could push Bitcoin back to $99,000. This level is the lower band of the Trader On-chain Realized Price bands, which is a price resistance during bear markets. 

After this level, the key price resistances are $102,000 (one-year moving average) and $112,000 (the Trader On-chain Realized price).

Bitcoin Trader’s Realized Price Bands

The Copper Research report also signaled optimism about Bitcoin. The report suggests that BTC’s four-year cycle hasn’t died; it has been replaced. 

Since the launch of spot ETFs, Bitcoin has exhibited repeatable Cost-Basis Return Cycles, as shown in the graph below.

Bitcoin USD Price Vs ETF Cost Basis

Fadi Aboualfa, Head of Research at Copper, told FXStreet that “Since spot ETFs launched, Bitcoin has moved in repeatable mini-cycles where it pulls back to its cost basis and then rebounds by around 70%. 

With BTC now trading near its $84,000 cost basis, this pattern suggests a move north of $140,000 in the next 180 days. 

If the cost basis rises 10-15%, as in prior cycles, the resulting premium seen at past peaks produces a target range of $138,000 to $148,000. 

Bitcoin Santa Rally Ahead? 

Bitcoin posted a 17.67% loss in November, disappointing traders who had anticipated a rally based on its strong historical returns for the month (see CoinGlass data below). 

December has historically been a positive month for the king crypto, delivering an average return of 4.55%.

Bitcoin Monthly Returns. Source: CoinGlass

Looking at quarterly data, the fourth quarter (Q4) has been the best quarter for BTC in general, with an average return of 77.38%. 

Still, the performance in the last three months of 2025 has been underwhelming so far, posting for now a 19% loss.

Is BTC Setting a Bottom? 

Bitcoin’s weekly chart shows the price finding support around the 100-week Exponential Moving Average (EMA) at $85,809, posting two consecutive green candles following a four-week correction that began in late October. 

As of this week, BTC is trading slightly higher, holding above $92,400. 

If BTC continues its recovery, it could extend the rally toward the 50-week EMA at $99,182.

The Relative Strength Index (RSI) on the weekly chart reads 40, pointing upward and indicating fading bearish momentum. For the recovery rally to be sustained, the RSI should move above the neutral level of 50. 

BTC/USDT weekly chart 

On the daily chart, Bitcoin’s price was rejected at the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement level at $94,253 (drawn from the April low of $74,508 to the all-time high of $126,199 set in October) on Wednesday. 

However, on Thursday, BTC rebounded after retesting its $90,000 psychological level. 

If BTC breaks above the descending trendline (drawn by connecting multiple highs since early October) and closes above the $94,253

resistance level, it could extend the rally toward the $100,000 psychological level. 

The Relative Strength Index (RSI) on the daily chart is stable near the neutral 50 level, suggesting the lack of near-term momentum in either side. 

For the bullish momentum to be sustained, the RSI should move above the neutral level. 

Meanwhile, the Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) showed a bullish crossover at the end of November, which remains intact, supporting the bullish thesis. 

BTC/USDT Daily Chart 

If BTC were to resume its downward correction, the first key support is at $85,569, which aligns with the 78.6% Fibonacci retracement level.

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Gold Weekly Forecast: Bulls Show Interest as Fed Cut Odds Grow

29 November 2025 at 10:16

Gold (XAU/USD) gained momentum early in the week as expectations for a Federal Reserve rate cut strengthened. Markets then slowed due to the US Thanksgiving holiday, yet the metal still rose more than 2% on the week. 

With the Fed’s blackout period starting on Saturday, investors will now shift focus to incoming US data.

Gold Rises as Fed Doves Grow Louder

Gold opened the week strong as traders reassessed the probability of a 25-basis-point cut in December. 

Late last week, Fed Governor Stephen Miran said he would support a 25 bps cut if his vote became decisive. His recent stance contrasts with his earlier preference for a 50 bps cut in previous meetings.

New York Fed President John Williams also signaled openness to easing. He said monetary policy remained “modestly restrictive,” adding there was room for a further adjustment soon.

Gold jumped more than 1.5% on Monday. It edged higher again on Tuesday before closing flat. ADP data showed that private employers shed an average of 13,500 jobs each week through November 8.

Gold to silver ratio (GTS) broke down a 14-year rising support. Immediate support comes at 72.
With gold price at $4,500 and GTS 72, silver to reach at least $62. This could be the case already next week…

This post is not an investment advice… pic.twitter.com/3rLptnAwpu

— Rashad Hajiyev (@hajiyev_rashad) November 28, 2025

Fresh US data on Wednesday showed 216,000 initial jobless claims for the week ending November 22, down 6,000 from the prior period. 

Durable goods orders rose 0.5% in September, beating expectations of 0.3%. These numbers did not alter Fed expectations, and Gold held firm above $4,100 ahead of the holiday.

Trading remained thin on Friday, but Gold stayed near the upper end of its weekly range.

Gold Investors Turn to US Data

Fed officials cannot comment again until the December 9–10 meeting. As a result, markets will rely on US data to gauge the likelihood of a rate cut.

According to the CME FedWatch Tool, traders now assign roughly an 85% chance of a 25 bps cut in December.

The US calendar begins with ISM Manufacturing PMI on Monday. A stronger employment index — especially a reading above 50 — could support the US dollar and weigh on XAU/USD.

The ISM Services PMI follows on Wednesday. A drop below 50 would signal contraction and could pressure the USD, offering support to Gold.

US Economic Calender For the First Week of December

Investors will also watch Thursday’s Challenger Job Cuts report. Layoffs surged to 153,074 in October, the highest level in 22 years. A sharp drop would ease labor-market concerns and may support the USD.

The BEA releases PCE Price Index data on Friday. However, this report covers September due to earlier backlog and is unlikely to move markets.

Gold Technical Analysis

The short-term technical view remains constructive, though momentum has not strengthened further. 

On the daily chart, Gold trades comfortably above the 20-day Simple Moving Average and the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement of the August–October rally at $4,125. The RSI holds near 60 and moves sideways.

Gold Price Chart

Support sits at $4,125 before $4,085 (20-day SMA), $4,030 (50-day SMA), and $3,970 (38.2% Fibonacci retracement). On the upside, resistance stands at $4,245, followed by $4,300 and $4,380.

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RBNZ Expected To Cut Interest Rates To 2.25% In November

26 November 2025 at 05:28

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) is expected to cut the Official Cash Rate (OCR) to 2.25% from 2.5%, following the conclusion of the November monetary policy meeting on Wednesday. 

The decision will be announced at 01:00 GMT, accompanied by the Monetary Policy Statement (MPS) and followed by RBNZ Governor Christian Hawkesby’s press conference at 02:00 GMT. The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) will likely experience a big reaction to the central bank’s policy announcements.  

What to expect from the RBNZ interest rate decision?

Following a standard 25-basis-point (bps) rate cut in August and a surprise 50-bps move in October, the RBNZ is expected to deliver a hat-trick, with a 25-bps reduction fully baked in for the November monetary policy meeting.  

The central bank decided to opt for a big rate cut in its last policy decision in the face of a slowing economy and confidence that inflation was under control

In its October Monetary Policy Review (MPR), the RBNZ noted that the “committee remains open to further reductions in the OCR as required for inflation to settle sustainably near the 2 percent target midpoint in the medium term.” 

Therefore, another rate cut on Wednesday would come as no surprise. 

Hence, all eyes will be on the discussions among the policymakers on further monetary policy easing heading into 2026. 

The revisions to the OCR projection in the first half of next year will also be closely scrutinized to gauge the bank’s path forward on rates. 

NZ Inflation Continues to Accelerate

Since the October 8 meeting, New Zealand’s annual Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation accelerated in the third quarter (Q3), coming in at 3.0%, in line with the forecasts and at the top end of the central bank’s 1% to 3% target range. 

However, the RBNZ made it clear in October that inflation was ticking higher, but noted that spare capacity in the economy should bring it back to 2% by mid-2026, suggesting that policymakers don’t expect inflation to be persistent. 

On top of that, the annual non-tradeable inflation decreased to 3.5% in Q3, compared with 3.7% in the second quarter. 

Additionally, the RBNZ’s monetary conditions survey showed on November 11 that two-year inflation expectations, seen as the time frame when the central bank policy action will filter through to prices, steadied at 2.28% in Q4 2025. 

Meanwhile, New Zealand’s Unemployment Rate rose to 5.3% in Q3 from 5.2% in the second quarter, according to the official data released by Statistics New Zealand on November 4. The figure aligned with the market consensus. 

Amidst expectations that underlying inflation is largely slowing, another rate cut by the RBNZ is justified. 

Economists at Westpac NZ said: “We expect a 25bp cut in the OCR to 2.25%. 

We see a downward revision in the projected OCR track of around 30-35bp, with a low point in the projection of around 2.20% in the first half of 2026. The implication is a mild and data-dependent easing bias for next year.” 

How will the RBNZ interest rate decision impact the New Zealand Dollar? 

The NZD/USD pair is miring in seven-month lows as the RBNZ event risk looms. Heightened expectations of a November rate cut have weighed heavily on the NZD since the end of October. 

If the central bank downgrades its inflation and/or OCR forecasts while retaining the easing bias, the Kiwi Dollar could extend the current downside. 

On the contrary, the NZD could witness a big relief rally should the RBNZ signal the end of the rate-cutting cycle amid an improving economic outlook and receding US tariff fears. 

Dhwani Mehta, Asian Session Lead Analyst at FXStreet, offers a brief technical outlook for NZD/USD and explains:

“From a near-term technical perspective, bearish potential remains intact for the Kiwi pair as the 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) remains vulnerable well beneath the midline.” 

“If sellers flex their muscles on a dovish RBNZ cut, the NZD/USD pair could drop further toward the falling trendline support at 0.5550. Further south, the 0.5500 round level and the April low of 0.5486 could be tested. On the flip side, the pair needs to scale the 21-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at 0.5663 on a sustained basis for any meaningful recovery. The next relevant topside targets align at the 50-day SMA at 0.5735 and the 0.5800 threshold,” Dhwani adds.

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