Canada’s dollar will probably remain within the range it has held since the start of the year because investors are still avoiding risk amid the unsettled U.S. economic outlook. It has traded within about 4 percent of parity with its U.S. counterpart, after surging last year as high as 17 percent.Read More: Canadian Dollar Falls on Speculation More Rate Cuts Are Coming
BOC to Cut Rates Further
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Ironically, the faltering US economy has induced the Dollar to
appreciate against many of the world’s currencies. The reasoning is that
countries whose economies are tied closely to the US will falter even
more than the US during a recession. One of those countries is
apparently Canada. As a result, the Bank of Canada has already moved to
cut rates by 50 basis points in order to mitigate against a full-blown
Canadian recession. All of the economic indicators are already pointing
downwards and GDP growth is projected to be a paltry 1.8% in 2008. In
addition, exports to Canada’s largest trade partner, the US, have sagged
noticeably, such that its current account recently slipped into deficit
for the first time in nearly a decade. The Bank of Canada is busy
plotting strategy, with additional rate cuts in the offing. It looks
like the monumental run of the Loonie has finally come to an end.
Bloomberg News reports:
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Canadian Dollar
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