Canadian dollar seen losing upside momentum over coming
year: Reuters poll
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[January 09, 2020] By
Fergal Smith
TORONTO (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar,
last year's top-performing G10 currency, will shift into a sideways
trading pattern this year as the domestic economy softens and the recent
boost from easing trade tensions fades, a Reuters poll showed.
The currency rallied 5% against the U.S. dollar in 2019, with about half
that gain accumulated in the final few weeks of the year as signs
emerged of recovery in the global economy and as the United States and
China moved toward an interim trade deal.
Canada is a major exporter of oil and other commodities so its economy
is more dependent on trade than some other countries, including the
United States.
"Risks decreased significantly at the end of 2019, which helped the
loonie and several other currencies. We do not expect another
significant reduction in risks in 2020," said Hendrix Vachon, a senior
economist at Desjardins. "We prefer to bet on a fairly flat trajectory
for the currency for the short term."
The poll of over 40 currency analysts showed they expect the loonie to
weaken 0.5% to 1.31 per U.S. dollar, or 76.34 U.S. cents, in three
months, from 1.30 earlier on Thursday. It is then expected to strengthen
to 1.30 in one year, matching the forecast in December's poll.
The projected loss of upside momentum for the loonie comes after recent
data pointed to a slowdown in the domestic economy that could keep the
door open to a Bank of Canada interest rate cut. Last year, the central
bank left its benchmark rate on hold at 1.75% amid easing by some of its
major peers, including the Federal Reserve and the European Central
Bank.
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A Canadian dollar coin, commonly known as the "Loonie", is pictured
in this illustration picture taken in Toronto, January 23, 2015.
REUTERS/Mark Blinch
Data in recent weeks has showed Canada's economy shrank 0.1% in October and shed
more than 70,000 jobs in November. The December employment report is due on
Friday.
Some economists are projecting annualized growth of less than 1% for the fourth
quarter. In October, the Bank of Canada projected fourth quarter growth of 1.3%.
"We believe that restrained exports and business investment will feed into the
weaker growth dynamic and set the stage for a BoC rate cut in Q2 (the second
quarter), most likely in April," said George Davis, chief technical strategist
at RBC Capital Markets.
A Reuters poll in November showed four of the top five major Canadian banks
expected the BoC to cut rates at least once by end-2020. Money markets see about
a 50% chance of an ease over the same period.<BOCWATCH>
(Polling and analysis by Indradip Ghosh, Sumanto Mondal and Tushar Goenka in
BENGALURU; Editing by Ross Finley and Chizu Nomiyama)
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