Friday, December 28, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ at 5-week low as US budget talks struggle

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ at 5-week low as US budget talks struggle
Dec 28th 2012, 21:32

Fri Dec 28, 2012 4:32pm EST

  * C$ ends lower at C$0.9965 vs US$, or $1.0035      * U.S. lawmakers meeting in bid to avoid fiscal cliff      * Bond prices higher across the curve          By Andrea Hopkins      TORONTO, Dec 28 (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar ended slightly weaker  against its U.S. counterpart on Friday as the White House and U.S. lawmakers  made a late attempt to avert the "fiscal cliff" and investors choose safe-havens  to wait out the negotiations.      World stocks slipped and the U.S. dollar gained as the deadline looms for  reaching a budget deal to avert massive tax increases and spending cuts that  could drag the U.S. economy, the destination for most Canadian exports, into  recession.       President Barack Obama was not planning to make a new offer to avert the tax  hikes and spending cuts that loom on Jan. 1 at a White House meeting with  congressional leaders on Friday, a source familiar with the meeting said.         At the meeting, Obama was set to ask lawmakers to hold a vote on a plan that  would allow taxes to rise on those who earn $250,000 and up, and that would  extend unemployment insurance benefits, according to the source.      "We saw some hint of progress on the fiscal cliff negotiations, a mini deal,  and for everyone that is a disappointment," said Adam Button, currency analyst  at ForexLive in Montreal.      Commodity-linked currencies like the Canadian dollar tend to benefit when  U.S. budget negotiations run smoothly, but when there are snags, investor flows  go into the highly liquid U.S. dollar.      The Canadian dollar ended the North American session at C$0.9965  versus the U.S. dollar, or $1.0035, weaker than Thursday's North American  session close at C$0.9949 versus the U.S. dollar, or $1.0051.      Earlier in the session the Canadian currency hit C$0.9969, its weakest level  since Nov. 23, but seemed bound by a tight range approaching parity with the  U.S. dollar.      "The Canadian dollar is once again just above parity and in no rush to go  anywhere, which is fitting - we end the year very close to parity because that  has been the story day after day in 2012," Button said.      He warned, however, that the final trading day of the year on Monday may  bring some volatility as investors square positions.      "Historically, this holiday time is very quiet, but we've had very large  moves in the yen and euro, so I would rule out nothing on Monday in terms of  substantial moves. Desks are thinly staffed but that hasn't kept markets from  moving," he said. "And in this kind of environment, you can't look for moves to  make sense - you just have to go with momentum."      Canadian government bond prices were higher across the curve on the flight  to safety. The two-year bond was up 1 Canadian cent, yielding 1.132  percent, while the benchmark 10-year bond rose 18 Canadian cents to  yield 1.774 percent.  
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