Thursday, April 26, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ slips after recent gains; U.S. data weighs

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ slips after recent gains; U.S. data weighs
Apr 26th 2012, 20:40

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Thu Apr 26, 2012 4:40pm EDT

  * C$ ends at C$0.9840 vs US$, or $1.0163      * Weighed down by U.S. jobless data      * C$ climbs to seven-month high overnight      * Bond prices higher across curve        By Jennifer Kwan          TORONTO, April 26 (Reuters) - Canada's dollar slipped  against its U.S. counterpart on Thursday, snapping four sessions  of gains and staying in a tight range for most of the day on  disappointing U.S. jobless claims data.       U.S. data on Thursday showed the number of Americans lining  up for new jobless benefits fell slightly last week but remained  above levels posted earlier this year, suggesting improvement in  the labor market is stalling.         "Some people are seeing the initial jobless claims this  morning as potential sign of negativity because there was not a  big improvement," said Charles St-Arnaud, economist and currency  strategist at Nomura Securities in New York.          U.S. stocks, however, rose on a batch of strong earnings and  upbeat housing data.          The Canadian dollar finished the session at  C$0.9840 versus the U.S. currency, or $1.0163, slightly softer  from Wednesday's close at C$0.9835 against the U.S. dollar, or  $1.0168. Overnight the currency hit C$0.9806, its strongest  level since Sept. 19.         The market focus will turn back to Bank of Canada Governor  Mark Carney, who is scheduled to deliver a speech to an Ottawa  business audience early on Friday morning.            In testimony before a Senate committee on Wednesday, Carney  repeated that domestic economic conditions have improved to the  point where it may become necessary that some of the  considerable monetary policy stimulus in Canada may need to be  withdrawn.            He dismissed the notion that the suggestion of coming  interest rate hikes might hurt consumers, saying conditions are  still very stimulative.               "Everything he has to say will drive markets right now  because people are really trying to see when is the timing of  the rate hike," said St-Arnaud.       Carney's testimony followed the U.S. Federal Reserve's  renewed pledge to hold interest rates near zero until late 2014  and Chairman Ben Bernanke's comments that the central bank would  not hesitate to resume asset purchases if necessary.      "The interest rate picture is favoring the Canadian dollar  at this point," said Matt Perrier, a director of foreign  exchange sales at BMO Capital Markets.        The currency's gains were also capped by data that showed  euro zone economic sentiment fell more than expected in April,  driven by more pessimistic industry and services sectors, as the  economy sinks into recession.         Canadian government bond prices were higher across the  curve. Canada's two-year bond gained 7 Canadian cents  to yield 1.395 percent, while the benchmark 10-year bond   gained 32 Canadian cents to yield 2.067 percent.  
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