The kiwi dollar was changing hands at $0.6189, having also eased 0.8% as far as $0.6168 overnight. Near-term support is around $0.6186. The two currencies also nursed heavy losses against the euro as short-dated German bond yields jumped in their biggest daily movement since 2008.
The euro rose 1.2% overnight to a one-year high of A$1.6194 before settling at A$1.6156 on Wednesday. It also jumped 1.3% overnight against the kiwi to NZ$1.7457 , a five-month high, before stabilising at NZ$1.7437.
Efforts by U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen to calm nerves seemed to be working, with bank shares rallying overnight. U.S. government officials were also pondering increasing the limit on deposit insurance, though there was no agreement on this as yet. "It might be early days, but the price action over the past 48 hours is certainly signalling a change in mood by investors," said Rodrigo Catril, senior FX strategist at National Australian Bank.
"The decline in financial stability concerns means that central banks have more room to refocus on their quest to bring inflation to heel and as a result, the market has increased expectation for further tightening over coming months." U.S Treasury yields jumped, with futures nudging up bets for the Federal Reserve to deliver a 25 basis point hike at its policy meeting which concludes on Wednesday. They also trimmed the size of rate cuts priced in by year-end to just 20 basis points, compared with 70 bps just days ago. Australian bond yields were marginally lower. Three-year government bond yields slipped 4 basis points to 2.901%, while 10-year yields eased 2 basis points to 3.322%. (Reporting by Stella Qiu; Editing by Bradley Perrett)