Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ up on Bank of Canada decision, weaker greenback

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ up on Bank of Canada decision, weaker greenback
May 29th 2013, 20:51

Wed May 29, 2013 4:51pm EDT

  * C$ at C$1.0352 to greenback, or 96.60 U.S. cents      * Bank of Canada sticks with rate-rise bias, holds steady      * Fed tapering in background, U.S. dollar slips broadly        By Alastair Sharp      TORONTO, May 29 (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar gained  against its U.S. counterpart on Wednesday as the greenback's  recent rally lost some steam and the Bank of Canada stuck to its  view that rates will at some point need to move higher.      The loonie, as Canada's currency is colloquially known,  gained in the initial aftermath of the central bank  announcement, which was also outgoing Governor Mark Carney's  last rate decision.       It then reversed course, breaking through the C$1.04 barrier  for the second straight session, before corporate and  institutional buyers emerged at what is considered the high end  of the established range. Before Tuesday, the loonie had not  breached C$1.04 since June last year.       "There was a great opportunity to sell (U.S. dollars) again  at around the C$1.04 level where we started to see some hedging  interest and broad-based (U.S. dollar) selling emerging," said  Darcy Browne, a managing director of foreign exchange sales at  CIBC World Markets.      The Canadian dollar ended at C$1.0352 to the  greenback, or 96.60 U.S. cents, compared with C$1.0395, or 96.20  U.S. cents, at Tuesday's North American close. It had changed  hands at C$1.0367 just before the rate decision was announced.      While the Canadian central bank was widely expected to keep  the policy rate and tightening bias unchanged, there had been  speculation in some quarters that it could be dropped, a  decision that would likely have weakened the currency.      The greenback retreated against a range of currencies, most  dramatically the safe haven yen and Swiss franc, as U.S. bond  yields came off 13-month highs.       "The market is being driven in the short term by higher  short-term yields in the U.S., which have dipped off a little so  the (U.S.) dollar-buying gas pedal has come off a little bit,"  Browne said.      U.S. yields have surged since Federal Reserve chairman Ben  Bernanke said last Wednesday the U.S. central bank might taper  its program of buying Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities  in the next few Fed policy meetings if data shows the economy is  gaining steam.      Canadian government debt has reflected the U.S. trend, but  to a lesser degree.       The two-year bond ended almost flat to yield  1.075 percent, while the benchmark 10-year bond   gained 11 Canadian cents to yield 2.066 percent.      With a rate increase seen as far off into the future, the  loonie is likely to remain beholden to events in the United  States, Canada's biggest trading partner.      "Probably the bigger driver of the Canadian dollar is going  to be developments south of the border. We've got the (Canadian)  dollar weakening significantly in our forecasts, but a good part  of that is likely due to U.S. dollar strength," said Derek  Burleton, deputy chief economist at Toronto-Dominion Bank.      The Bank of Canada decision balanced the impact of  weaker-than-expected inflation data and more robust growth.  Canada is still expected to lag its southern neighbor this year.      "Like any currency, what's more important is the relative  performance between the Canadian and U.S. economies," Burleton  said. "Nothing has changed the story that Canada's economy is no  longer the growth outperformer."      First-quarter gross domestic product data due on Friday will  provide the next major Canadian data point, with expectations of  a decent jump already priced in to the currency, analysts said.  
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