The NZD/USD pair was seen trading near the 0.5725 area on Monday, showing mild downside pressure ahead of the Asian session. After a short-lived attempt to gather bullish traction, the kiwi remains capped by the convergence of two key daily moving averages, which continue to act as a magnet for price action. Indicators now show signs of weakening momentum, hinting at limited follow-through in either direction for now.
On the technical front, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) sits right around the 50 mark and is mildly declining, reflecting a neutral momentum profile and lack of strong directional bias. Meanwhile, the Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) is printing decreasing green bars, suggesting that bullish momentum is gradually fading. These developments reinforce the idea that the pair might remain rangebound unless a breakout occurs.
The 20-day and 100-day Simple Moving Averages, clustered around 0.5730, have become pivotal levels. A decisive break below this area could expose the next support near 0.5700, opening the door for further downside in the near term. Conversely, holding above these SMAs could allow buyers to retest the 0.5780 region and potentially eye the 0.5830 zone beyond.