- NZD/USD stays firm following China’s first-quarter GDP data release.
- China’s Q1 2026 GDP rose 1.3% QoQ from 1.2% in Q4 2025, matching expectations.
- The US Dollar weakens on improved sentiment amid expectations of Middle East de-escalation.
NZD/USD remains stronger for the fourth consecutive day, trading around 0.5920 during the Asian hours on Thursday. The pair remains stronger following China’s first-quarter Gross Domestic Product figures. China’s economic change could impact the NZD as a key trading partner for New Zealand.
China’s economy expanded 1.3% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) in the first quarter (Q1) of 2026, compared to a 1.2% growth in Q4 of 2025, coming in line with the market consensus. On an annual basis, the Chinese Gross Domestic Product (GDP) rate rose 5.0% in Q1 after advancing 4.5% in the previous quarter, stronger than the market expectation of 4.8% print.
China’s annual March Retail Sales increased by 1.7% versus 2.3% expected and 2.8% prior, while Industrial Production came in at 5.7% versus 5.5% estimate and February’s reading of 6.3%.
The NZD/USD pair appreciates as the US Dollar (USD) continues to lose ground on improved market sentiment, driven by expectations of a potential de-escalation in the Middle East conflict.
US President Donald Trump stated that the war was “close to over.” A Bloomberg report indicated speculation about a possible two-week extension of a ceasefire, although Trump dismissed the necessity of such a move, citing ongoing negotiations aimed at ending the conflict.
The Greenback faced additional pressure from easing energy prices, which helped ease inflation concerns and tempered expectations of further central bank tightening. The Federal Reserve (Fed) is widely anticipated to hold interest rates steady this month and possibly for the rest of the year.


