The Canadian Dollar has been one of the world’s top performers this
year, especially relative to the Dollar. The Bank of Canada is less than
thrilled about this distinction, which is why it takes advantage of
nearly every opportunity to remind the markets that it will do
everything in its power to prevent the Loonie from rising further. The
markets are beginning to wonder, however, whether the BOC is actually
prepared to put its money where its mouth is, if push comes to shove.
It’s impossible to say definitively whether the Canadian Dollar’s
rise is justified by fundamentals. On the one hand, the ongoing economic
recovery and commodities boom will specifically benefit resource-rich
economies, such as Canada. It’s no surprise that Canada has been one of
the most popular destinations for so-called “risk-averse” investment.
Summarized one analyst, “It all revolves around the risk-aversion trade.
Last week with equity markets and commodities selling off, we also saw
the Canadian dollar selling off in that environment. Today the market
settled down a little bit, so we were able to see the Canadian dollar
claw back some of its losses.” In addition, it’s not as if the Loonie’s
appreciation has been universal. Its gains are primarily against the US
Dollar; in this sense, it has merely been subsumed into a larger trend,
rather than having been singled out by forex traders.
On the other hand, the economy is forecast to contract in 2010,
before returning to full capacity at some point in 2011. The Bank of
Canada has flooded the market with currency, via its own version of
quantitative easing. Non-commodity exports are stalling, and the
government is running record budget deficits. The benchmark interest
rate is only .25%, and the BOC has committed to holding it there until
June 2010, barring any unforeseen developments. Thus, there is no
“positive carry” to be earned from parking money in Canada.
In the context of forex intervention, this analysis is almost beside
the point, since the BOC is clearly impervious to logic. Its decision to
intervene at this point will probably be based less on economics and
more on politics. You see, the Bank has left itself with very little
wiggle room, should the Canadian Dollar continue to rise towards, or
even past parity with the US Dollar. Its rhetoric has been fairly
consistent; whether or not it actually has the wherewithal to intervene
successfully (it probably doesn’t) it has conveyed to the markets that
has both the means and the determination.
As a result, the BOC has pushed itself into a no-win situation. If
the Loonie appreciates further and it doesn’t intervene, then it will
have very little credibility going forward. If the Loonie rises and it
does intervene, it risks incurring the wrath of the international
community and wasting money towards a futile cause. “It’s hard for a
modest-sized central bank such as Canada’s to flood the market with so
much currency that it alters the balance of the world’s huge and complex
foreign-exchange markets,” explained one economist.
The Bank’s best hope is that the markets continue to take its threats
seriously and abstain from betting on the Loonie. For now, it looks
like this is the case. “No one wants to go heavily long through the next
few months in fear that the Bank of Canada does step in some way,” said
one trader.
In fact, the threat of intervention may have even brought speculators
into the market to bet against the Loonie, having derived support from
the last round of intervention (1998): “Traders took the bank’s
willingness to intervene as an open invitation to bet heavily on the
other side of the equation – knowing they had a big trading partner
back-stopping their bet.”
It’s basically a giant game of chicken between the markets and the BOC. Who will blink first?
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