Only a year ago, who could have conceived of such a possibility? At
the time, the Canadian Dollar (aka Loonie) was in the doldrums, as a
result of the credit crunch and concomitant collapse in commodity
prices. In March, however, the Loonie began an extraordinary rally, and
finished the year up 16%, almost perfectly offsetting the record decline
that it suffered in 2008. As a result, the Loonie is now only pennies
away from returning to parity.
The Loonie’s rise can be ascribed to a combination of fundamentals
and speculation. On the fundamental side, a surge in the price of oil
and other commodities has driven a recovery in the Canadian economy.
Summarized one strategist, “The fundamentals in Canada are strong.
Sentiment is bullish Canada, and on a relative basis, Canada should do
very well with stronger commodity prices and ongoing U.S. economic
recovery.” On the other hand, non-commodity exports remain sluggish,
such the current account balance is currently in the red.
It’s obvious then that the gap between reality and expectation is
being filled by speculation. Despite the fact that both short-term and
long-term Canadian interest rates remain low, investors are pouring
money into Canadian assets in the hopes that rates will soon rise. This
speculation reached a fever pitch in October of 2009, when the Loonie
spiked 6% in less than two weeks, following a modest Australian rate
hike.
At that point, Canadian Central Bank governor Mark Carney was forced
to firmly step in (previously he had effectively remained on the
sidelines) by warning investors that he was in no hurry to lift rates,
and that “he had ways of cooling the currency.”
While analysts credit Carney’s jawboning with effecting a modest
decline in the Loonie, it has since resumed its upward march, breaking
through the technical barrier of 97.5 CAD/USD yesterday.
In the short-term, sheer momentum will almost surely carry the Loonie
through parity with the Dollar. Analysts are divided on the timing,
with some suggesting as soon as this month and others suggesting that
later in the year is more likely. They should be careful, as there is an
exuberance in the forex markets that I havn’t seen since right before
Lehman Brothers collapsed- the event that many say signaled the
beginning of the forex markets. In other words, investors are surely
getting ahead of themselves, since commodities are well off of their
2008 highs, interest rates are down, Canadian economic growth is
mediocre, Canada’s fiscal condition is weak, and it is operating a
current account deficit.
For this reason, many analysts are already becoming bearish on the
Loonie. “The loonie looks potentially more vulnerable on a number of
crosses unless we see renewed upside momentum,” expressed a strategist from RBC Capital Markets. But noticed that she framed a continued rise in terms of momentum, rather than fundamentals. That’s tantamount to saying, Unless the Canadian Dollar continues to appreciate, it won’t continue to appreciate.
If that’s not a tautology, I don’t know what is! But seriously, she has
a point, which is that the Loonie is being driven purely by speculation
at this point, in a trade that could soon come crashing down…after it
hits parity.
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