Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ rises as Bank of Canada keeps rate stance

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ rises as Bank of Canada keeps rate stance
Jul 18th 2012, 18:54

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Wed Jul 18, 2012 2:54pm EDT

  * C$ up at C$1.0108 vs US$, or 98.93 U.S. cents      * Currency rises to highest in nearly two weeks      * Bank of Canada defends rate hike signal      * Bond prices climb across curve        By Jennifer Kwan      TORONTO, July 18 (Reuters) - Canada's dollar rose against  its U.S. counterpart on Wednesday, boosted by broad firmness in  global equities and as the Bank of Canada maintained its  rate-hike stance even while most other major advanced economies  are moving in the opposite direction.      The currency rose to C$1.0101 versus the greenback,  its strongest level since July 5, as Governor Mark Carney  defended its position by saying Canada cannot "cut and paste"  monetary policy.       "we've weathered the storm a lot better than most other  countries especially in Europe and the States. The market is  still taking his comments that rates will have to go up some  time as a positive," said David Bradley, director of foreign  exchange trading at Scotiabank.      " The Canadian dollar is benefiting from that purely from a  yield play."       At 2:30 p.m. EDT (1830 GMT), the Canadian dollar   was at C$1.0108 versus its U.S. counterpart, or 98.93 U.S.  cents, up from Tuesday's finish at C$1.0126 or 98.76 U.S. cents.      Also supporting the currency was a move higher in global  equities, with the S&P 500 hitting its highest level  since early May on Wednesday as corporate profits from  bellwethers like Intel and Honeywell defied the  market's fears about global growth.       Equities were also supported by optimism Federal Reserve  Chairman Ben Bernanke may act to stimulate the U.S. economy if  needed, underscoring his concerns especially in the job market.      But stocks diverged from other asset classes. The euro fell  broadly on Wednesday after comments by German Chancellor Angela  Merkel reignited worries about the euro zone debt crisis and  government bond prices rose over fears of slow economic growth.         Germany - considered Europe's safest haven - sold bonds at a  negative yield for the first time.      The top-up auction of two-year bonds raised 4.173 billion  euros and follows short-term Treasury bill sales at negative  yields by Germany and other higher-rated euro zone states.         Traders also cited a media report that quoted German  Chancellor Angela Merkel as saying she could not be sure the  European project would work.      "I think that Germany issuing two-year bonds with a negative  yield for the first time and Merkel's comments certainly, in my  mind, underscore what's wrong in Europe and will weigh on the  euro," said Jack Spitz, managing director of foreign exchange at  National Bank Financial.      Spitz noted that the 200-day moving average was still  providing significant support for the U.S. dollar versus  Canada's around C$1.0109: "A close below the 200-day moving  average technically does set up dollar/Canada for a move lower  towards better support near parity."      Canadian bond prices climbed across the curve with the  two-year government bond up 2 Canadian cents to yield  0.964 percent, while the benchmark 10-year bond   added gained 25 Canadian cents to yield at 1.615 percent.  
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