Monday, May 28, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ gains in holiday-thinned trade

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ gains in holiday-thinned trade
May 28th 2012, 20:45

Mon May 28, 2012 4:45pm EDT

  * C$ ends at C$1.0238 vs US$, or 97.68 U.S. cents      * Outperforms most G10 currency peers      * Bond prices fall across the curve        By Jennifer Kwan          TORONTO, May 28 (Reuters) - Canada's dollar climbed against  its U.S. counterpart on Monday, recovering from a  four-and-a-half month low hit in the previous session, as Greek  polls showed growing support for pro-bailout parties.         Global share markets recovered overnight from steep falls  last week, when investors fled to the safety of the U.S. dollar  on mounting concerns about Greece, Spain's banking sector, and a  lack of immediate policy responses from European leaders.                "The positive news out of Europe caused a bit of demand for  the Canadian dollar and other risk-based assets," said Blake  Jespersen, a managing director of foreign exchange sales at BMO  Capital Markets.              Greek opinion polls pointed to gains for the conservative  New Democracy party in the June 17 election, making it more  likely the next Greek government will stick to bailout terms  agreed with the European Union and the International Monetary  Fund, enabling Greece to stay in the euro.            "The pro-bailout party is gaining traction and is leading in  the polls so the market viewed that as a positive," said  Jespersen.            The Canadian dollar ended at C$1.0238 versus the  U.S. dollar, or 97.68 U.S. cents, stronger than Friday's North  American session close at C$1.0295 against the U.S. dollar, or  97.13 U.S. cents.             The Canadian dollar outperformed many of its G10 currency  peers, including the euro and Japanese yen. It underperformed  its commodity-linked cousins, the New Zealand and Australian  dollars.              "The market has decided to stop catastrophizing Greece ...  and the market is taking that as a catalyst perhaps to start  pulling back on its extreme long (U.S.) dollar positioning,"  said Jack Spitz, managing director of foreign exchange at  National Bank Financial.              But analysts said trading was subdued because of the long  U.S. holiday weekend, with U.S. financial markets closed on  Monday for the Memorial Day holiday.          Later in the week U.S. employment and housing data, Canadian  growth numbers, and an Irish vote on the European Union's new  fiscal treaty will provide further direction.         "It's been a very very quiet day and very little flow to  speak of given the U.S. holiday. So a lot of the large clients  have chosen to stay out of the market today given the thin  liquidity," said BMO's Jespersen.             Jespersen sees the currency stuck in a range of about  C$1.0220 to C$1.03 against the greenback.             Canadian government bond prices edged lower across the curve  with the two-year bond down 4 Canadian cents to yield  1.093 percent, while the benchmark 10-year bond was  off by 40 Canadian cents to yield 1.843 percent.  
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