Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ rises on BoC policy news, but Spain trims gain

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ rises on BoC policy news, but Spain trims gain
Jun 5th 2012, 20:50

Tue Jun 5, 2012 4:50pm EDT

  * C$ ends at C$1.0380 vs US$, or 96.34 U.S. cents      * BoC only modestly tones down hawkish language      * Spain's banking woes weigh on markets      * Bond prices mostly lower        By Jon Cook       TORONTO, June 5 (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar firmed  against its U.S. counterpart on Tuesday, boosted by signals the  Bank of Canada is still more inclined to raise rates than cut  them, but the rise was limited by concerns about Spain's  debt-laden banks.             The language of the Bank of Canada's scheduled interest rate  announcement on Tuesday had a less hawkish tone than its policy  statement in April. The central bank acknowledge deteriorating  economic conditions abroad, as it kept its key policy rate at 1  percent.              However, the statement was still more hawkish than many  market players had expected, as the central bank did not remove  the possibility of a rate increase further down the road should  the Canadian economy maintain its momentum.           "The statement did seem to point towards that the next move  here, in their mind, will be a rate hike," said Shane Enright,  executive director, foreign exchange sales at CIBC World  Markets.              Repeating language used in April, the central bank said  "some modest withdrawal of the present considerable monetary  policy stimulus may become appropriate," though it qualified  this by saying it depended on continued economic growth.              The Canadian currency strengthened near its overnight high  of C$1.0361 against the U.S. dollar, or 96.52 U.S. cents, before  falling back later in the session. It was around C$1.04 prior to  the Bank of Canada announcement.              The prospect of higher interest rates tends to help  currencies strengthen by attracting international capital flows.  The Bank of Canada's main policy rate has been at 1 percent  since September 2010.         The Canadian dollar, which outperformed most major  currencies, finished at C$1.0380 against the U.S. dollar, or  96.34 U.S. cents. It was up slightly from Monday's close at  C$1.0397 versus the greenback, or 96.18 U.S. cents.           The boost from the Bank of Canada announcement was limited  by fears about the state of Spain's fragile banking sector.           The euro fell as Spain's treasury minister said high  borrowing costs were closing the country off to credit markets  and investors received scant comfort from an emergency  conference call of Group of Seven finance chiefs.             "The vulnerability of markets and the volatility  predominately out of Europe will continue to weigh on a currency  like Canada," said Jack Spitz, managing director of foreign  exchange at National Bank Financial. "I would expect  dollar-Canada to trade more sideways."        Enright said the currency would likely trade between  C$1.0350 and C$1.0450 for the near term, pending signals of  further stimulus measures from Wednesday's European Central Bank  policy meeting and U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke's  testimony to the U.S. Congress on Thursday.           Further out from that, market watchers were looking ahead to  Greek elections and a G20 meeting in Mexico, both on the weekend  of June 17.           Canadian bond markets were mostly lower. Canada's two-year  bond fell 4 Canadian cents to yield 0.993 percent,  while the benchmark 10-year bond dropped 57 cents to  yield 1.737 percent.  
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