Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ pares gain after strong U.S. consumer data

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ pares gain after strong U.S. consumer data
Nov 27th 2012, 18:15

Tue Nov 27, 2012 1:15pm EST

  * C$ at $0.9933 vs US$, or $1.0067      * U.S. data comes in better than expected      * Global lenders broker deal to cut Greek debt      * C$ expected to trade between C$0.9875 and C$0.9950      * Bond prices mixed        By Solarina Ho      TORONTO, Nov 27 (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar   pared early gains to trade flat against its U.S. counterpart on  Tuesday after data showed U.S. consumer confidence in November  rose to a four-and-a-half-year high.       The Canadian currency typically responds positively to signs  of growth in the economy of its southern neighbor and biggest  export market, and one analyst said the move might have more to  do with repositioning after a bounce in light trading last week.      "All the economic data that's been released this morning, at  least in the U.S. session, generally met or exceeded  expectations," said David Tulk, chief Canada macro strategist at  TD Securities, referring to the consumer confidence index, house  price data and gauges of planned business spending and  manufacturing activity.       "So from that perspective, I'm inclined to think of this as  more of a couple of weeks worth of moves that's being dealt with  as opposed to just a momentary reaction to the data."      Investors also let out a sigh of relief after the  International Monetary Fund (IMF) and Greece's euro zone  neighbors brokered a deal to cut Greek debt.      After 12 hours of talks, global lenders agreed on a package  of measures to reduce Greek debt to 124 percent of gross  domestic product by 2020 and promised further measures to lower  it below 110 percent in 2022.       "The agreement overnight has buoyed risk-sensitive  currencies and we are seeing that flow into the Canadian  dollar," said John Curran, senior vice president at  CanadianForex.      At 12:39 a.m. (1739 GMT), the currency was trading at  C$0.9933 to the U.S. dollar, or $1.0067, only slightly stronger  than Monday's North American close of C$0.9938, or $1.0062.      The currency at one point hit C$0.9906, its strongest since  Nov. 7.      Canada's dollar showed broad strength, outperforming most  other major currencies, including the euro, Japanese  yen and fellow commodities-linked currencies, the  Australian and New Zealand dollars.      Curran said the currency would likely trade between C$0.9875  and C$0.9950 on Tuesday. He expected some U.S. dollar buying  interest around C$0.9880 to C$0.9900.      "There's still longer term players looking to deleverage  their long-Canada positions just due to the ongoing fact that  our economic data has not been too great. And those are  longer-term factors. What's helping the Canadian dollar are  short-term factors," said Curran.      "If we continue to see the Canadian economy losing steam,  you will see a selloff in the Canadian dollar. You have those  two opposing forces at each other."      Prices for Canadian government debt were mixed, with the  two-year bond shedding half a Canadian cent to yield  1.106 percent and the benchmark 10-year bond adding  half a cent to yield 1.755 percent.  
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