Friday, October 5, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ ends firmer, touches 2-wk high on strong jobs

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ ends firmer, touches 2-wk high on strong jobs
Oct 5th 2012, 20:37

Fri Oct 5, 2012 4:37pm EDT

  * C$ ends at C$0.9789, or $1.0216      * Canadian currency hits strongest level since Sept. 21      * Data reinforces Bank of Canada's hawkish tone        By Andrea Hopkins      TORONTO, Oct 5 (Reuters) - Canada's dollar ended firmer  against its U.S. counterpart on Friday after touching a two-week  high, boosted by much stronger-than-expected Canadian jobs data  and a surprise drop in the U.S. unemployment rate.      The U.S. unemployment rate dropped to a near four-year low  of 7.8 percent in September, while Canada added a thumping  52,100 jobs, almost all of them full-time, defying expectations  and bolstering the Bank of Canada's case for an eventual  interest rate rise.        "The key point here is the economy is still churning out  jobs at a healthy pace," said Doug Porter, deputy chief  economist at BMO Capital Markets. "The combination of figures is  unambiguously positive for the Canadian dollar."      The Canadian dollar ended the day at C$0.9789 to  the greenback, or $1.0216, not far from its North American close  on Thursday at C$0.9805, or C$1.0199. At one point it hit  C$0.9735, its strongest level since Sept. 21.      A number of factors limited the currency's gains, including  some skepticism that the Canadian economy is as robust as the  employment numbers suggest, as well as weakening commodity  markets, said Shaun Osborne, chief currency strategist at TD  Securities.      "With commodity prices pulling back here, I think it's going  to be a struggle for the Canadian dollar to do significantly  better than highs we saw just a few weeks ago," he said.      "I'm a little skeptical that given what appears to be a  fairly slow growth environment in the U.S. that Canada can  continue to generate these rather stellar job numbers moving  forward," Osborne added.      With investors shifting into riskier assets, Canadian  government bond prices fell. The two-year bond   slipped 9.5 Canadian cents to yield 1.138 percent, while the  benchmark 10-year bond fell by 42 Canadian cents, to  yield 1.807 percent.      Bond prices also fell as the data fueled expectations the  Bank of Canada was more likely to tighten policy next year. A  top official with the central bank reiterated the central bank's  rate hike bias on Thursday.       Overnight index swaps, which trade based on expectations for  the central bank's key policy rate, showed that traders  increased bets on a rate hike in 2013 after the job reports.         "This positive Canadian jobs data will definitely put  pressure on the Bank of Canada to raise rates sooner rather than  later and maintain its hawkish tone towards raising rates,"  Rahim Madhavji from Knightsbridge Foreign Exchange wrote in a  note to clients.  
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