Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ strengthens as investors hope for debt ceiling deal

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ strengthens as investors hope for debt ceiling deal
Oct 16th 2013, 14:13

Wed Oct 16, 2013 10:13am EDT

  * C$ at C$1.0367 vs US$, or 96.46 U.S. cents      * Focus on Washington debt ceiling discussions      * Canadian bonds outperform U.S. Treasuries        By Leah Schnurr      TORONTO, Oct 16 (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar strengthened  against the greenback on Wednesday as investors remained hopeful  a deal would be reached In Washington to raise the U.S.  government's borrowing limit and avoid a potential default.      U.S. lawmakers prepared for a last ditch effort to come to  an agreement to raise the debt ceiling, with the borrowing  authority set to run out on Thursday. The top Democrat and  Republican in the U.S. Senate were said to be close to agreeing  on a proposal for consideration by the full Senate later on  Wednesday.       The down-to-the-wire nature of the negotiations were  reminiscent of the debt ceiling debate in 2011 when a deal was  reached at the last minute, and investors still believe a  solution will be forthcoming this time around.      Still, Fitch Ratings on Tuesday warned it could cut the  sovereign credit rating of the United States from AAA, citing  the political brinkmanship citing the political brinkmanship  over raising the federal debt ceiling.       This would leave Canada as one of a shrinking handful of  countries with an undisputed AAA rating.       Fitch's warning on Tuesday could serve as a warning shot to  U.S. politicians, said Scott Smith, senior market analyst at  Cambridge Mercantile Group in Calgary.      "The markets seem to be convinced that we'll be able to get  a deal hammered out before we move past this 'x-date' and really  get into trouble with the potential of a technical default,"  Smith said.      The Canadian dollar was at C$1.0367 versus the U.S.  dollar, or 96.46 U.S. cents, stronger than Tuesday's close at  C$1.0380, or 96.34 U.S. cents.      A U.S. default would roil markets and economies around the  world. At the same time, the fiscal standoff has seen the U.S.  government partially closed since the beginning of the month.       Any economic fallout from the shutdown could also impact  Canada, whose largest trading partner is the United States.      If the likelihood of a default starts to increase, some  investors could push into short-term Canadian treasury bills,  though money is more likely to go into bond markets with greater  liquidity, such as Britain and Japan, said Smith.      The impact a default would have on the Canadian economic  growth outlook could also limit flows into Canadian bonds, Smith  said.      On Wednesday, government bond prices were mixed across the  maturity curve. The two year bond was unchanged to  yield 1.234 percent, while the benchmark 10-year bond   fell 17 Canadian cents to yield 2.671 percent.      Canadian treasury bills and government bonds were  outperforming their U.S. counterparts. The spread between what  Canadian and U.S. three-month T-bills yield narrowed to 78 basis  points from 82 basis points on Tuesday, as investors demanded  less of a premium to lend to Canada.  
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