Monday, December 3, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ weakens as North American factory data drags

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ weakens as North American factory data drags
Dec 3rd 2012, 21:49

Mon Dec 3, 2012 4:49pm EST

  * C$ at $0.9949 vs US$, or $1.0051      * U.S. manufacturing data contracts unexpectedly in Nov      * Canada PMI shows manufacturing slowed for 5th month      * Bond prices mixed        By Solarina Ho      TORONTO, Dec 3 (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar softened  against the U.S. currency on Monday after U.S. data showed the  country's manufacturing sector shrank unexpectedly in November,  though signs of economic growth in China tempered losses.      The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said its index of  national factory activity in the United States fell to 49.5 in  November from 51.7 the month before, its lowest level in more  than three years and below expectations.       "Equities turned after the ISM data came out this morning,"  said David Bradley, director of foreign exchange trading at  Scotiabank, but added the moves were very limited.      "There's just a lot of market positioning going on ahead of  some of the central bank announcements later this week, some  more data coming out this week."      Meanwhile, Canadian manufacturing growth slowed for a fifth  straight month in November and hit a more than two-year low,  according to the RBC Canadian Manufacturing Purchasing Managers  Index. This signaled the third-quarter's disappointing economic  performance may persist for the rest of the year.         "The data's been softer for Canada and softer for the U.S.  as well. The general risk-on tone that we started the day with  has been eaten away at a little," said Mark Chandler, head of  Canadian fixed income and currency strategy at Royal Bank of  Canada.      "Most of the indicators that we've seen coming out for  Canada have been soft, and I think that's putting the Canadian  dollar a little bit on a back foot - meaning there's a chance of  it getting weaker."      The Canadian dollar finished the session at  C$0.9949 versus the U.S. dollar, or $1.0051, compared with  Friday's North American session close of C$0.9936, or $1.0064.      "Unfortunately, I just think we're going to be in for phases  of almost historically low volatility, especially now that we're  into December, heading into the holiday season. I don't see  anything that's going to push us out of this range," said  Bradley, adding that investors may buy the Canadian dollar as it  approaches C$0.9960.      Canada also underperformed against most other major  currencies, although it did touch a 1-1/2 week high against the  Australian dollar during the session.      The Canadian dollar began paring overnight gains even before  the U.S. data was released, but it got a brief boost from  Chinese manufacturing figures early in the day. Official and  private sector surveys showed activity picked up in the  country's vast manufacturing sector in November, adding to  evidence that China's economy is reviving after seven quarters  of slowing growth.       Investors will be watching the Bank of Canada's interest  rate announcement on Tuesday for any shift in its long-held  tightening bias.      "We still think the tightening bias will be left in place  tomorrow, but we also expect a slightly more dovish language,  including an admission maybe that growth is modestly weaker than  what the bank was looking for," Chandler said.      The central bank is expected to hold off raising interest  rates until the fourth quarter of 2013 but will continue to talk  about a hike, a Reuters poll of market forecasters found.         "There's a bit of uncertainty over the last couple of  meetings based out of (Governor Mark) Carney being so hawkish in  the beginning of the summer ... but I think this meeting's going  to be a non-event, to be honest," Bradley said.      Markets were still cautious about the budget impasse in  Washington. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner pushed  Republicans on Sunday to offer specific ideas to cut the  deficit, and predicted that they would agree to raise tax rates  on the rich to obtain a year-end budget deal to try to avoid the  possibility of a recession.      Canadian bond prices were mixed, with the two-year bond   up 1 Canadian cent to yield 1.064 percent, while the  benchmark 10-year bond lost 3 Canadian cents to  yield 1.702 percent.  
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