Showing posts with label Loonie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Loonie. Show all posts

4.06.2010

Loonie nears Dollar parity


Canada’s Dollar Trades at Parity for First Time Since July 2008

Excerpt:

Canada’s dollar was worth more than the U.S. currency for the first time since July 2008 on the back of the rising price of crude oil and the prospect of higher interest rates.

Canada’s dollar, dubbed the loonie for the aquatic bird on the C$1 coin, last traded at par with the greenback on July 22, 2008, 11 days after crude, the country’s biggest export, reached a record $147.27 a barrel. Oil traded near a 17-month high.

“It’s a perfect storm for the Canadian dollar,” Jonathan Gencher, director of foreign exchange sales at Bank of Montreal in Toronto. “Canadian rates are higher and Canada will be moving before the Fed. Oil is higher. The fundamentals suggest we’ll hang around here for a while.”

The currency gained as much as 0.3 percent to C$99.92 per U.S. cents, and traded at C$1.0001 at 10:19 a.m. in Toronto, compared with from C$1.0022 yesterday. One Canadian dollar buys 99.98 U.S. cents.

The loonie traded on a one-for-one basis with the U.S. currency in September 2007 for the first time in three decades, capping a five-year run on the back of booming demand for the nation’s commodities.

Canada, the largest trading partner of the U.S., has benefited from rising demand for copper, gold, wheat and oil from the U.S. and emerging economies such as India and China. The country is the world’s largest producer of uranium, the second-biggest exporter of natural gas, and sits on the largest pool of oil reserves outside the Middle East. Canada is also the world’s second-largest exporter of wheat.


Comment: Mentioned earlier here. A couple of neat sites if you are interested in exchange rates: OANDA and x-rates

3.10.2010

Loonie parity


Canadian dollar likely to trump US greenback: experts

Excerpt:

The Canadian dollar, or loonie as it is affectionately called here, is likely to soar above parity with the US greenback this year, experts at a Canadian bank said Wednesday.

Canadian Imperial Bank of Canada (CIBC) chief economist Avery Shenfeld said the Canadian dollar had already gained several cents in recent weeks as the market firms up expectations of an interest rate hike in July.

If as expected, the central bank "is out in front of the US Federal Reserve by a couple of quarters" in raising interest rates, the Canadian dollar could reach 1.02 dollars versus the US dollar by September, before dipping back to 0.97 dollars by year end," Shenfeld said.

The Bank of Canada has maintained its key lending rate at a historic low of 0.25 percent since April 2009 to help bolster a fragile economic recovery, but is widely expected to review its position mid-year.

CIBC said other factors were also aligning to push up the value of Canada's currency such as increased demand for oil, minerals and fertilizers; resurgent capital markets; and global debt fears.

"If the capital markets finally get an appetite for M&A (mergers and acquisitions) then Canada could be one of the first places to see the benefit of foreign inflows," said CIBC analyst Zafar Bhatti.

Or "if the investing world starts looking for a place to park capital in the wake of deteriorating sovereign credits then Canada would look very attractive," Bhatti said in a report.

Since the beginning of the year, the Canadian dollar has appreciated 2.5 percent against the US dollar and more than seven percent against the euro.

The loonie last achieved parity with the US greenback in 2008, and previously hit a record 1.10 dollars in 2007.


Comment: On a trip from Thunder Bay to Fort Francis, we stopped at some small Canadian town for coffee and a scone. I paid with a US $ 20. The change Canadian was more than $ 20. It was confusing. Back in the days when the dollar meant something