Which Currency Didn’t Like Yesterday's FOMC Meeting?

Thursday, 18/09/2025 | 15:32 GMT by Itai Levitan for FinanceMagnates.com
  • The New Zealand dollar has been extending its losses.
  • Among the majors, the Kiwi tumbled 1.17%, far weaker than peers like CAD, EUR, and GBP, which slipped only slightly.
Which Currency Didn’t Like the FOMC Meeting? Look at the New Zealand Dollar
Which Currency Didn’t Like the FOMC Meeting? Look at the New Zealand Dollar

Which Currency Didn’t Like the FOMC Meeting? Look at the New Zealand Dollar

The U.S. dollar may have softened modestly after yesterday’s FOMC meeting, but the real underperformer was the New Zealand dollar, which tumbled more than 1.1 percent on the day. While most major currencies lost ground against the greenback, the NZD stood out as the weakest, highlighting that its troubles go beyond just the Fed.

Indeed, part of the move reflects local weakness. The New Zealand dollar has been extending its losses after terrible domestic data and forecasts for more rate cuts. Adding fuel to the fire, the latest GDP print showed the economy grew just 0.6% quarter-on-quarter in Q2, missing the 0.8% forecast and barely topping 0.3% expected — another signal that growth momentum is fading (read more here at investingLive.com, formerly ForexLive.com).

Perfromance of NZD vs some main peers since yesterday's FOMC
Perfromance of NZD vs some main peers since yesterday's FOMC

Relative to peers, the Canadian dollar lost only 0.12%, the euro 0.18%, and sterling 0.25%. Even the yen, often quick to weaken on U.S. policy divergence, fell a smaller 0.66%. The New Zealand dollar’s 1.17% drop clearly marks it as the most vulnerable of the group.

So while yesterday’s FOMC decision to hold rates steady pressured most currencies, the NZD’s decline looks like a combination punch: global dollar strength following the Fed and homegrown weakness from poor economic data and rate cut expectations.

Interestingly, while the NZD disliked the Fed outcome, the crypto space had a different response. XRP surged after the FOMC decision, with traders taking Powell’s comments as a green light for risk-on sentiment. The divergence is a reminder that not all assets respond to the Fed the same way; some crack under the weight of policy signals, while others use them as fuel.

This article is for information purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.

Which Currency Didn’t Like the FOMC Meeting? Look at the New Zealand Dollar

The U.S. dollar may have softened modestly after yesterday’s FOMC meeting, but the real underperformer was the New Zealand dollar, which tumbled more than 1.1 percent on the day. While most major currencies lost ground against the greenback, the NZD stood out as the weakest, highlighting that its troubles go beyond just the Fed.

Indeed, part of the move reflects local weakness. The New Zealand dollar has been extending its losses after terrible domestic data and forecasts for more rate cuts. Adding fuel to the fire, the latest GDP print showed the economy grew just 0.6% quarter-on-quarter in Q2, missing the 0.8% forecast and barely topping 0.3% expected — another signal that growth momentum is fading (read more here at investingLive.com, formerly ForexLive.com).

Perfromance of NZD vs some main peers since yesterday's FOMC
Perfromance of NZD vs some main peers since yesterday's FOMC

Relative to peers, the Canadian dollar lost only 0.12%, the euro 0.18%, and sterling 0.25%. Even the yen, often quick to weaken on U.S. policy divergence, fell a smaller 0.66%. The New Zealand dollar’s 1.17% drop clearly marks it as the most vulnerable of the group.

So while yesterday’s FOMC decision to hold rates steady pressured most currencies, the NZD’s decline looks like a combination punch: global dollar strength following the Fed and homegrown weakness from poor economic data and rate cut expectations.

Interestingly, while the NZD disliked the Fed outcome, the crypto space had a different response. XRP surged after the FOMC decision, with traders taking Powell’s comments as a green light for risk-on sentiment. The divergence is a reminder that not all assets respond to the Fed the same way; some crack under the weight of policy signals, while others use them as fuel.

This article is for information purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.

Itai Levitan for FinanceMagnates.com
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Head of Strategy at investingLive.com (formerly ForexLive.com), with 25 years of business experience and over a decade in investing, equities & real estate. Holding an MBA and a BS in Computer Science, he combines technical expertise with strategic insight to deliver actionable perspectives on the markets. At investingLive.com, Levitan leads efforts to provide actionable analysis, trade ideas & decision support for traders and investors. Focuses on reward-to-risk strategies, while dedicating over 15,000 hours to chart study and producing forecasts and trade ideas. As an advanced user of AI in finance, he works at the junction of data, methodology, and markets, seeing AI as a driver of productivity, innovation, and deeper investigation. His focus is on practical trading and real-world analysis. “We live in a fascinating time where AI opens new doors and creates strategies. For someone who loves strategy and markets, this is a playground ever-changing and endlessly interesting.”
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