Canada's rebound to outweigh risks central bank sees in strong dollar
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[May 19, 2021] By
Julie Gordon and Fergal Smith
OTTAWA (Reuters) - The Bank of Canada has
expressed concern about the strong dollar hurting exports, but soaring
demand for commodities and a looming rebound in consumer spending are
seen limiting the impact, economists said.
Governor Tiff Macklem said last week that a much stronger Canadian
dollar could strain exports, but his comments were more nuanced than
earlier warnings, suggesting the bank is unlikely to act, barring a
sharp uptick in speculative demand.
"At the moment he doesn't seem to be in any rush to talk it down," said
Royce Mendes, senior economist at CIBC Capital Markets. The Canadian
dollar has surged nearly 6% so far this year and on Tuesday touched a
6-year high of about 1.20 to the U.S. dollar, or 83.33 U.S. cents.
(Graphic: CAD value in USD,
https://graphics.reuters.com/CANADA-ECONOMY/CURRENCY/
azgpogygbpd/chart.png)
A strong loonie typically makes it tougher for Canadian exporters to
compete globally and makes Canada less attractive for business
investment. In its April forecasts, the Bank of Canada assumed the CAD
would remain around 80 U.S. cents and said a stronger loonie could hit
export projections.
Countering that is the sheer volume of demand for goods amid a
stimulus-driven global economic recovery. Commodity prices -
particularly for the metals, minerals and lumber that Canada produces -
have sky-rocketed, fueled by industrial buyers and speculators.
And that is trickling down to Canadian pocketbooks.
"Incomes are higher because commodity prices are higher and we're
selling those commodities, and that sort of offsets the drag coming from
non-commodity exports and business investment," said Mendes.
With vaccinations ramping up and COVID-19 cases declining, Canada looks
on track to begin reopening the hardest-hit sectors of its economy in
the second half of the year, leading to a household spending boom that
will further buoy the recovery.
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Shipping containers are
seen behind fencing in the Port of Montreal in Montreal, Quebec,
Canada, May 17, 2021. REUTERS/Christinne Muschi/File Photo
"We are telling Canadian businesses... this is a fasten-your-seat-belts time.
This is where the G-force of the economy is going to be so strong it's going to
suck you back into your seat more than you have ever seen before," said Peter
Hall, chief economist at Export Development Canada.
STRONGER YET
The expectations of strong global growth, high commodity prices and a domestic
recovery could drive the Canadian dollar higher yet, said economists. Views were
mixed as to how much the potential hit to exports of a stronger currency might
be offset by the benefits of cheaper imports and a dampening of inflation
pressures.
Meanwhile, the Bank of Canada appears likely to keep its current guidance that
rates could start rising in the second half of 2022.
"The currency is not going to be enough, in our view ... to lull them off
tightening ahead the (U.S. Federal Reserve,)" said Derek Holt, head of Capital
Markets Economics at Scotiabank.
But currency speculation is increasing. Data last Friday from the U.S. Commodity
Futures Trading Commission showed that investors have raised their bullish bets
on the Canadian dollar to the highest level since November 2019, although they
remain well below the extreme levels seen in 2012 and 2017.
To counter a rise in speculative activity, the central bank could try talking
the dollar down, "implying that if it doesn't depreciate, then the central bank
will delay the timing of rate hikes," said Mendes.
(Reporting by Julie Gordon in Ottawa and Fergal Smith in Toronto; Editing by
Andrea Ricci)
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