The USD/CAD advances firmly towards the 1.2700 as the New York session begins, up 0.18%, trading at 1.2694 at the time of writing. A risk-off market sentiment spurred demand for the greenback, as it keeps posting new year-to-date highs versus most G8 currencies. The US Dollar Index, which measures the greenback's performance against a basket of six rivals, is up 0.41%, sitting at 96.80, at press time, but earlier reached a new 16-month high at 96.93.
In the overnight session, the USD/CAD pair remained steady around the Tuesday low at 1.2664, meandering in a narrow trading range, before crucial US macroeconomic data.
The US macroeconomic docket featured US Initial Jobless Claims, Durable Goods data, and GDP figures. The Initial Jobless Claims for the week ending on November 10 rose to 199K, lower than the 260K foreseen by analysts. The USD/CAD jumped 20 pips on the release, reaching a daily high above 1.2700.
Furthermore, the Durable Good Orders for October on a monthly basis fell 0.5% more than the 0.4% contraction expected by analysts. Excluding transportation, orders rose more than expectations, up to 0.5% vs. 0.2%, for the same period. Market participants seem to have ignored the data, as the Fed's current focus is on jobs and inflation.
Also, the US GDP for Q3 grew by 2.1%. In line with market participants' expectations. That said, USD/CAD attention turns to the Fed favorite gauge of inflation, the Personal Consumption Expenditure for October, expected at 4.6%.