Friday, October 5, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ hits 2-week high on rosy U.S., Canada jobs data

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ hits 2-week high on rosy U.S., Canada jobs data
Oct 5th 2012, 14:02

Fri Oct 5, 2012 10:02am EDT

  * C$ strengthens to C$0.9746, or $1.0261      * Canadian currency at its strongest since Sept. 21      * Bank of Canada's hawkish tone remaining tenable        By Alastair Sharp      TORONTO, Oct 5 (Reuters) - Canada's dollar climbed to a  two-week high against its U.S. counterpart on Friday after jobs  data showed the North American labor market had improved in  September.      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.        "I think 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. "I think the combination of  figures is unambiguously positive for the Canadian dollar."        The Canadian dollar jumped sharply against the U.S.  dollar, which itself gained against the Japanese yen.         By 9:45 a.m. (1345 GMT) the Canadian currency was trading at  C$0.9746 to the greenback, or $1.0261, compared to C$0.9810, or  C$1.0194, just before the data was released. At one point it hit  C$0.9735, its strongest level since Sept. 21.      "Certainly, it dispels some of the concern through the  second quarter where we were getting some indication of maybe a  stalling in job growth; these last two months have put to rest  those concerns," said Paul Ferley, Royal Bank of Canada's  assistant chief economist.      Canadian government bond prices fell, with the two-year bond   slipping 13 Canadian cents to yield 1.153 percent,  while the benchmark 10-year bond fell by 50 Canadian  cents, to yield 1.816 percent.      The slip in the price of government debt showed a move out  of perceived safe-haven assets, as well as an assumption that  the Bank of Canada has more leverage to potentially raise  interest rates, an intention it repeated Thursday.  {ID:nL1E8L4667]      "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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