The
loonie has rallied nearly 11% against its U.S. counterpart since
March, but progress has stalled over the last two months as
resurging coronavirus cases and delay of a U.S. pandemic relief
package weighed on investor sentiment.
The outlook for fiscal stimulus will be shaped by Tuesday's U.S.
election, including the White House race between President
Donald Trump and his Democratic challenger Joe Biden.
"If you do have a Biden victory, particularly a Blue Wave, we
would have a larger expectation that you would see a much larger
fiscal package come through," said Mazen Issa, senior FX
strategist at TD Securities.
"That is ultimately reflationary and pretty positive for risk
assets. It's an environment that the (U.S.) dollar should
underperform and the CAD should do particularly well," Issa
said.
Blue is the color associated with the Democratic Party, versus
Republican red. Biden is well ahead in national opinion polls,
but races are tighter in battleground states that will be
crucial to the election result.
The Canadian dollar is expected to strengthen slightly to 1.32
per U.S. dollar, or 75.76 U.S. cents, in three months from about
1.3230 on Monday, the poll of more than 30 currency strategists
showed. It is then expected to climb to 1.2938 in one year,
compared to 1.3000 in last month's forecast.
Canada is a major producer of commodities, including oil, so the
loonie tends to be sensitive to the outlook for the global
economy. That outlook has become more uncertain in recent weeks
as some countries, including Canada, reintroduced measures to
help contain the spread of the virus.
"We see the Canadian dollar remaining around 1.33 over the next
few months due to continued uncertainties related to the
pandemic," said Hendrix Vachon, a senior economist at
Desjardins.
"Subsequently, the international context should improve, which
would favor several currencies, including the loonie."
Last month, a Reuters poll predicted the world economy grow 5.3%
next year after shrinking 4.0% this year. That is a touch higher
than the International Monetary Fund's latest forecast of 5.2%
in 2021.
(Reporting by Fergal Smith; Polling by Manjul Paul, editing by
Ed Osmond)
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