The New Zealand dollar drifted lower on Wednesday after dovish comments from a top central banker outweighed a slight upside surprise on domestic inflation.
The Australian dollar fared no better in part as speculation a Brexit deal might be near saw the pound surge further to its highest since mid-2016 at A$1.8946, a rise of almost 5% in as many sessions.
The Aussie in turn slipped 0.2% to $0.6737 and further away from last week's top at $0.6810. The kiwi eased back to $0.6280, likewise leaving behind the recent peak of $0.6317.
The kiwi had briefly rallied when local data showed consumer price inflation rose 0.7% in the third quarter, slightly topping forecasts of 0.6%.
The market is pricing in around a 93% chance of an easing at the next policy meeting in November.
Yields on two-year bonds are already down at 0.82%, lower from 1.75% at the start of the year.
Australian government bond futures were a shade softer on Wednesday, with the three-year bond contract off 1 tick at 99.320. The 10-year contract eased 2.5 ticks to 98.9600.
Annual inflation still slowed to 1.5%, though that was firmer than the Reserve Bank of New Zealand's own forecast of 1.3%.
The result did not stop RBNZ Deputy Governor Geoff Bascand from saying that further rate cuts might be needed to bolster growth, and again flag the chance of unconventional easing steps such as buying government bonds.
"What's more important for the RBNZ is the trajectory of inflation, and the forward indicators are looking weaker," said Jarrod Kerr, chief economist at Kiwibank.
"Firms are reporting weaker demand, inflation expectations are easing, and core measures of inflation were a touch softer," he added. "We expect the Bank will cut by 25 basis points to 0.75% in November, and eventually take the cash rate down to 0.50% early next year."
Markets are also wagering the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) will ease again in the next couple of months, with the timing likely to be affected by September jobs data due on Thursday.
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