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NZD/USD
The New Zealand dollar remains under pressure in early European trading, slipping to approximately 0.5865 as global markets pause ahead of the Federal Reserve’s April policy meeting. With the US central bank widely expected to leave interest rates unchanged at 3.50%-3.75% for the third consecutive time, all eyes are on Chairman Jerome Powell’s subsequent press conference. This appearance carries extra weight, as it may be Powell’s last before the Fed presidency transitions to nominee Kevin Wash. Any hawkish rhetoric emphasizing persistent inflation would likely bolster the US dollar, creating immediate resistance for NZD/USD. Looking at the H4 chart, the 200 SMA sits at 0.5830, acting as the final dynamic support floor for the Kiwi. A daily close below this level would confirm that Fed hawkishness has overwhelmed any bullish case. Meanwhile, the H4 50 SMA at 0.5890 currently floats above price, signaling that near-term momentum has shifted bearish as traders de-risk before Powell’s comments. Switching to the H1 time frame, both the 200 SMA and 50 SMA converge at the exact same level of 0.5885. This rare cluster creates a powerful dynamic resistance ceiling. With NZD/USD trading below 0.5885, the hourly chart leans decisively bearish. To break higher, buyers would need to overcome this dual-SMA barrier, which is unlikely unless Powell sounds unexpectedly dovish or a major risk-on catalyst emerges. That catalyst could come from US-Iran peace developments. Pakistani mediators expect Iran to submit a revised peace proposal in the coming days, while President Trump confirmed Iran is demanding the US lift its naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. Any tangible progress toward ending the two-month war would improve global risk sentiment, potentially lifting the Kiwi back above the H1 SMA cluster at 0.5885. Until then, the moving averages align with a cautious, dollar-positive fundamental outlook.