Friday, December 7, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ strongest in a month after jobs data

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ strongest in a month after jobs data
Dec 7th 2012, 14:45

Fri Dec 7, 2012 9:45am EST

  By Solarina Ho      TORONTO, Dec 7 (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar strengthened  against the U.S. dollar for the fourth straight session on  Friday, jumping to a one-month high after both the Canadian and  U.S. economies added more jobs than expected in November.      In Canada, government data showed 59,300 net new positions  were created last month, the most number of jobs created in  eight months. The jobless rate fell to 7.2 percent, the lowest  since March, from 7.4 percent, said Statistics Canada.         "It's a solid report, from head to toe. At least upon first  glance, I don't see any major warts in the data," said Doug  Porter, deputy chief economist at BMO Capital Markets.      "There was a decline in construction and manufacturing jobs,  but that's quibbling, given the fact that almost all the  outsized gains were in private sector and full-time jobs."      Overnight index swaps, which trade based on expectations for  the central bank's key policy rate, showed that traders resumed  placing small bets on a rate increase in late 2013 after the  employment reports.       In the United States, nonfarm employment increased by  146,000 jobs last month, the Labor Department said, defying  expectations of a sharp pull back related to superstorm Sandy.  However, a drop in the jobless rate to a near-four year low as  people gave up the search for work suggested the labor market  was still tepid.       "It's pretty much a one direction bet today for risk assets,  and in this case for the Canadian dollar I think you're probably  going to have that general bid-tone sustained for the rest of  the day," said Mazen Issa, a strategist at TD Securities.       At 9:34, the Canadian dollar was trading at  C$0.9880 versus the greenback, or $1.0121. This was stronger  than the C$0.9925, or $1.0076 it was trading at just before the  jobs reports were released and firmer than Thursday's North  American session finish of C$0.9911, or $1.0090.      It had strengthened to its best level in a month, touching  C$0.9877, or $1.0125, shortly after the release of the North  American data.      "Between this and a decent U.S. number, the dollar's taken  on a bit of strength ... I'm not convinced it's going to have  staying power for the currency, but at least probably for today  it will be supportive," said Porter.      Canada's dollar was also outperforming all other major  currencies except the Japanese yen. It touched its strongest  level against the euro in about 2-1/2 weeks.      Canadian bond prices fell across the curve, with the  two-year bond shedding 7 Canadian cents to yield  1.081 percent, and the benchmark 10-year bond   falling 25 Canadian cents to yield 1.721 percent.  
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