Monday, June 25, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ sags as investors doubt Europe summit

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ sags as investors doubt Europe summit
Jun 25th 2012, 20:30

Mon Jun 25, 2012 4:30pm EDT

  * Currency ends at 97.16 U.S. cents      * C$ touches lowest since June 12      * Bonds climb as investors shun risk        By Jennifer Kwan      TORONTO, June 25 (Reuters) - Canada's dollar fell against  its U.S. counterpart on Monday and bond prices rose as global  markets were rattled on investor fears policymakers at a  European summit this week would make little progress in solving  the region's debt crisis.      The euro weakened broadly, global equities fell sharply and  the U.S. dollar and the price of North American government debt  rose as investors sought safety ahead of the June 28-29 meeting  of European Union leaders. On Monday, Cyprus became the fifth  euro zone country to seek EU aid.         "We have a general risk-off day so we have oil prices  weaker, equity prices weaker, as I think there's concern that  the EU summit will disappoint at the end of the week, and that  global growth concerns are a major worry," said Camilla Sutton,  chief currency strategist at Scotiabank.      The Canadian currency finished at C$1.0292 to the  greenback, or 97.16 U.S. cents. Earlier, it touched C$1.0318,  its weakest against the greenback since June 12.      It finished its North American session on Friday at C$1.0246  to the greenback, or 97.60 U.S. cents.      The negative backdrop had been set as Spain formally  requested euro zone rescue loans on Monday to recapitalise banks  that are laden with bad debts. Later, Cyprus announced it was  seeking a lifeline for its banks and its budget.      Cyprus joins Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain in seeking  EU rescue funds, meaning more than a quarter of the 17 euro zone  members are now in the bloc's emergency ward. Italy's funding  costs have soared too, which means it could be next.         German Chancellor Angela Merkel dashed any lingering hope in  financial markets that Europe would issue common euro zone bonds  to underpin its single currency after Spain formally became the  fourth state to request a financial rescue.       "The markets are starting the week on a sour note, all  relating to Europe," said Blake Jespersen, a managing director  foreign exchange sales at BMO Capital Markets.      Jespersen said Canada's dollar, which notched a mixed  performance against most of its major currency peers but  outperformed the New Zealand and Australian dollars, would  likely trade a range of C$1.0250-C$1.04 in the near term.      "There's no real Canadian data on the calendar until Friday  so the Canadian dollar is going to take its cues from what's  going on in Europe and the overall theme in the market. So  expect that to be quite negative this week," he said.      Markets will await domestic growth data for April due out on  Friday, as well as industrial product and raw materials price  data.       Canadian bonds mirrored moves in U.S. Treasuries, which were  higher as investors flocked to safety on doubt that the European  summit would successfully resolve the region's debt crisis.      The two-year Canadian government bond climbed 14  Canadian cents to yield 1.002 percent, while the benchmark  10-year bond was up 76 Canadian cents to yield 1.728  percent. The 30-year bond yielded 2.301.  
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