Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ hits 2-week low as euro zone efforts flounder

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ hits 2-week low as euro zone efforts flounder
Sep 26th 2012, 20:55

Wed Sep 26, 2012 4:55pm EDT

  * C$ at C$0.9852 vs US$, or $1.0150      * Euro zone concerns spark equity, commodity selloff      * Bond prices rise across the curve        By Solarina Ho      TORONTO, Sept 26 (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar hit a  two-week low against the U.S. currency on Wednesday, tracking  weaker global stock and commodity markets, as worries over  Spain's commitment to reform added to persistent unease over the  global economic outlook.      World shares fell and the euro slipped to a two-week low  amid a second day of violent anti-austerity protests in Madrid  and talk of secession by Spain's wealthy Catalonia region.  Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who had been reluctant to  ask for help, vowed that he is committed to fiscal and  structural reforms.       A general strike in Greece and signs of discord among top  euro zone officials over new policies to tackle the crisis added  to investor concerns, taking the gloss off recent moves by the  European Central Bank to calm markets by buying bonds.         "What's going on under the surface, or at least had really  defined the market earlier in the day, is that all the progress  that we'd made in the last couple of weeks with respect to  Europe had basically run a little ahead of itself," said David  Tulk, chief Canada macro strategist at TD Securities.      "We're in this waiting period right now for Spain to get its  act together ... The bears are a little bit louder than the  bulls today."      Concern over the euro zone's ability to tackle its financial  crisis has sparked a sharp rise in volatility on equity markets,  leading to the worst day since June for the S&P 500 index on  Tuesday and subsequent falls across Asia.          "There's no one thing in particular the market's focusing  on. We've just had this constant drip-feed of what's been taken  as negative news," said Adam Cole, global head of FX strategy at  RBC Capital Markets in London.      "None of them is really new, nothing that we didn't already  know, but the fact that it's just been relentless all day,   really, has given us this negative tone for risk generally and  that's weighing on the Canadian dollar."      The Canadian dollar finished Wednesday's North  American session at C$0.9852 versus the U.S. dollar, or $1.0150,  down from Tuesday's close at C$0.9806, or $1.0198.      The Canadian dollar, which touched a 13-month high a week  and a half ago, also underperformed against other major  currencies.      Tulk said the currency's retreat was likely not over.      "We probably have a little bit further to run as you wait  for more of these headlines to come out -- and our sense is that  there's a little bit more bad news, or at least a sense of  impatience on the part of the market," he said.      While Tulk says trading around the C$0.98 level was not  unreasonable in the near term, TD does project the Canadian  dollar to return to parity by the end of the year.      Canadian government bond prices were higher across the  curve. The two-year bond rose 6 Canadian cents to  yield 1.091 percent, while the benchmark 10-year bond   gained 60 Canadian cents, yielding 1.749 percent.  
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