Thursday, June 21, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ sells off on global growth fears

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ sells off on global growth fears
Jun 21st 2012, 20:21

Thu Jun 21, 2012 4:21pm EDT

  * C$ ends at C$1.0293 vs US$, or 97.15 U.S. cents      * Weak Chinese, Europe, U.S. data fans growth worries      * Domestic retail sales data weighs on currency      * Canada tightens mortgage rules to cool house market        By Jennifer Kwan      TORONTO, June 21 (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar fell to a  one-week low against its U.S. counterpart o n T hursday as  investor fears about slowing global growth sent equity and  commodity markets sharply lower.      Surveys on Thursday showed business activity across the euro  zone shrank for a fifth straight month in June and Chinese  manufacturing contracted, while weaker overseas demand slowed  U.S. factory growth.       The data darkened the outlook for the global economy and  pushed oil prices below $90 a barrel for the first time since  December 2010, while currencies of commodity-linked economies,  including Canada, Australia and New Zealand sold off as  investors dumped riskier investments and fled to the relative  safety of the U.S. dollar.        "The picture is still not bright. All the economic  indicators globally are down. That's the reality of the  situation. People are definitely shedding risk," said John  Curran, senior vice president at CanadianForex.      He said he sees the currency trading as low as C$1.0420  against the greenback in the near term.      The Canadian dollar ended the session at C$1.0293  versus the U.S. dollar, or 97.15 U.S. cents, nearly a cent down  from Wednesday's finish at C$1.0192, or 98.12 U.S. cents.  Earlier, the currency touched C$1.0296, its weakest against the  greenback since June 13.      In another sign that Canadian second-quarter growth could be  unimpressive, retail sales in April posted a surprise 0.5  percent drop from March on general weakness. Analysts had  predicted a 0.3 percent month-on-month increase.       Also in the spotlight, the Canadian government tightened  rules for mortgages and household borrowing o n T hursday to make  it harder for home buyers and homeowners to take on massive debt  in an attempt to cool the still hot domestic housing market.         The news was generally positive, but the move could weigh on  the Canadian dollar as it might take pressure off the Bank of  Canada to move quickly on interest rates, said Camilla Sutton,  chief currency strategist at Scotiabank.      "From our perspective, it dampens the housing market. The  positive side is that it dampens it as opposed to crushing a  bubble that is allowed to just form year after year after year.  Having a slow decline is much better than having a complete  meltdown when a bubble is burst," said Sutton.       "It takes some of the pressure off the Bank of Canada," she  added.      The Bank of Canada signaled on Thursday it is still  considering interest rate hikes, but cautioned it was keeping a  close eye on Europe and saw less risk from a heated domestic  housing market after the government tightened mortgage rules.         Canadian bond prices climbed across the curve, mirroring  moves in the United States, where Treasury prices were higher on  the weak economic data, a day after the Federal Reserve said it  was ready to do more to help an increasingly fragile recovery.         Canada's two-year bond was up 10 Canadian cents  to yield 1.043 percent, while the benchmark 10-year bond   was up 38 Canadian cents to yield 1.748 percent.  
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