In January, the Canadian Dollar (aka Loonie) registered its worst
monthly performance since June. Many analysts pointed to this as proof
that its run was over, after coming tantalizingly close to parity.
Others insisted that the decline was only a temporary correction, a mere
squaring of positions before the Loonie’s next big run. Who’s right? Both!
There are (at least) two separate narratives presently weighing on
the Loonie. The first is causing it to decline against its arch-rival,
the US Dollar, for reasons that essentially have nothing to do with the
Canadian Dollar and everything to do with the US Dollar. Specifically,
the mini-crisis that is playing out in Greece and the EU has caused risk
aversion to resurface, such that investors are now returning capital to
the US. One analyst
explains the impact of this seemingly tangential development on the
Loonie as follows: “When you get any sort of ‘risk-off’ type of
environment like we’ve had over the past week or so, currencies like the
Canadian dollar and the Australian dollar will come under pressure.”
The second narrative explains why the Canadian Dollar continues to
hold its own against most other currencies. Specifically, Canada’s
economic recovery continues to gain momentum as commodity prices
continue their rally. In the latest month for which figures are
available, the economy added about 80,000 jobs, more than five times
what forecasters were expecting. This turn of events is helping to quash the “view
that the Canadian trade sector is incapable of growth with a strong
currency,” and making traders less nervous about sending the Loonie up
even higher.
Going forward, there is tremendous uncertainty. Both short-term
(determined by the Bank of Canada) and long-term (determined by
investors) interest rates remain quite low, such that the Loonie is not
really a candidate for the carry trade. In addition, the Bank of Canada
hasn’t completely ruled out the possibility of intervention on behalf of
the Loonie; it may simply leave its benchmark interest rate on hold (at
the current record low of .25%) for longer than it otherwise would
have. In addition, a series of recent tightening measures by the
government in China threatens to crimp demand for commodities and weigh
on prices. Finally, the market turmoil in Greece is causing investors to
look afresh at the balance sheets (in order to weigh the likelihood of
default) of other economies. This probably won’t help Canada, which
continues to run large deficits and whose debt level once earned it the
dubious distinction of “honorary member of the Third World.”
Still, Canada’s capital markets are among the most liquid and stable
in the industrialized world, and if risk-aversion really picks up, it
won’t suffer as much as some other economies. “The Canadian economy
is not as structurally impaired as the U.S. or the U.K. It creates a
sense that Canada is less exposed to the fickleness of foreign investors
that are causing uncertainty in other locations.” In fact, the Central
Bank of Russia just announced that it will switch some of its foreign
exchange reserves into Canadian Dollars, and other Central Banks could
follow suit.
While the Canadian Dollar should continue to hold its own against
other currencies, the same cannot necessarily be said for its
relationship to the US Dollar. “Options traders are the most bearish on
the Canadian dollar in 13 months…The three-month options showed a
premium today of as much as 1.34 percentage points in favor of Canadian
dollar puts.” In other words, the price of insurance against a sudden
decline in the CAD/USD is rising as investors move to cushion their
portfolios against such a possibility. While this trend could ease
slightly in the coming weeks, I personally don’t expect it to disappear
altogether. All else being equal, given a choice between owning Loonies
or Greenbacks, I think most investors would choose Greenbacks.
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