Thursday, November 8, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ touches 1-week low, tracks falling equities

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ touches 1-week low, tracks falling equities
Nov 8th 2012, 18:38

Thu Nov 8, 2012 1:38pm EST

  * C$ at C$0.9988 vs US$, or $1.0012      * U.S. equities fall as 'fiscal cliff' in focus      * Canada and U.S. trade deficits narrow on increased exports      * Canadian housing starts fell in October      * ECB holds interest rate steady        By Solarina Ho      TORONTO, Nov 8 (Reuters) - Canada's dollar retreated to its  weakest level against its U.S. counterpart in more than a week  on Thursday, tracking declining U.S. and Canadian equity  markets, as investors largely overlooked a mixed bag of North  American economic data.      Wall Street's three major indexes were lower on Thursday, as  investors continued to adjust for upcoming negotiations over the  "fiscal cliff," which overshadowed a batch of positive economic  data.        Both Canadian and U.S. stocks were hit hard in the previous  session over worries Washington may not reach a deal in time to  avoid the "fiscal cliff."      "Canada is still extremely highly correlated to the S&P ...  The correlation is still somewhere over 80 percent. They pretty  well run in tandem. For now, it just looks like Canada is  tracking the equity markets," said Darcy Browne, managing  director, foreign exchange sales at CIBC World Markets.      By early afternoon, the Canadian dollar traded at  C$0.9988 to the U.S. dollar, or $1.0012, weaker than Wednesday's  North American close of C$0.9961, or $1.0039.      Earlier in the session, Canada's dollar touched a one week  low of C$0.9995, or $1.0005.      "We're still running into really good selling interest  around this parity level, maybe slightly above," Browne added.      The Canadian dollar was underperforming against most major  currencies around midday, including the euro, which had touched  a two-month low against the U.S. dollar after the European  Central Bank kept interest rates at a record low and said the  region's economy showed little signs of recovering before the  end of the year.        In economic news, Canada's trade deficit fell unexpectedly  in September as exports increased and imports were unchanged,  Statistics Canada data indicated.       Trade is a major driver of Canada's economy and analysts  cite the problems faced by exporters, such as a strong Canadian  dollar and weak foreign markets, as reasons for sluggish growth  in recent months.      "The currency doesn't want to garner any kind of support  from what ordinarily would be a positive report," said Michael  Gregory, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets.      Less positive for the Canadian economy was a report that  showed Canadian housing starts fell in October as both single  and multiple urban starts slumped. The Canada Mortgage and  Housing Corp's report confirmed the country's once-booming  housing market was slowing further.       South of the border, the U.S. trade deficit narrowed last  month as well on increasing exports, suggesting global demand  for U.S. goods was holding up despite the debt crisis in Europe.         "I think the market is keying in on other things. The big  sell-off in equities yesterday shook the foundation of the  market and people are watching that more than the numbers  today," said Browne.      Separately, Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney made no  mention of domestic monetary policy or the Canadian dollar in a  speech on Thursday.       The price of Canadian government debt mostly fell across the  curve. The two-year government of Canada bond fell 2  Canadian cents to yield 1.088 percent, while the benchmark  10-year bond shed 4 Canadian cents to yield 1.749  percent.  
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