Monday was the fifth consecutive session that the Australian dollar weakened against the New Zealand dollar. It has now fallen to test a three-year old trend line on the graph below.
The last leg down in the Aussie actually began last October, and through Monday's low, it is off by a little more than 7%. In fairness, it has really been in a broad range for several years – roughly NZD1.03 to NZD1.14 and mostly NZD1.05-NZD1.10. The trend line comes in now near NZD1.0445.
The technical indicators on the daily bar charts are not generating strong signals that a bottom is at hand. The RSI is at new lows since February 21. The MACDs are at there lowest levels since late February. The Slow Stochasitcs put in a low in late March but are still in the trough.
Some observers are concluding that New Zealand is less exposed than Australia to a trade war. In the CME futures, we note that the net speculative position is now net short the Aussie and net long Kiwi, but the positions are small. However, we suspect that the logic is post-hoc in the sense that the cross was already moving against the Aussie long before the trade tensions escalated. And one of the big knocks against the Aussie is that its curve is below the US. The same can be said for New Zealand.