USD/CAD remains dicey around 1.3170-80 during early Wednesday morning in Europe, despite pausing a two-day downtrend, as market players seek more clues to defend the Loonie pair buyers amid a sluggish Asian session.
That said, the downbeat prints of Canada’s headline inflation numbers contrast with upbeat details of the US Retail Sales, as well as a pullback in WTI Crude Oil, the biggest Canadian export earner, to lure the USD/CAD buyers. However, risk-on mood and dovish Fed concerns seem to prod the Loonie pair’s upside momentum of late.
On Tuesday, Canada’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) for June eased to 2.8% YoY from 3.0% expected and 3.4% prior. More importantly, the Bank of Canada (BoC) CPI Core also softened to 3.2% YoY from 3.7% expected and 3.5% expected. On the other hand, US Retail Sales growth for June came in as 0.2% MoM versus 0.5% expected and prior (revised). However, the Retail Sales Control Group marked 0.6% growth versus market forecasts of -0.3% and 0.3% previous readings. It should be noted that the US Industrial Production reprinted -0.5% for June compared to analysts’ estimations of 0.0%.
Elsewhere, WTI crude oil drops 0.35% to $75.40 by the press time as it consolidates the biggest daily gains since July 07 amid fears of lower energy demand from China, as well as on hopes of higher supplies from Nigeria and Libya.
That said, China Industry Ministry recently conveyed fears of insufficient demand and declining revenues and justifies the downbeat Gross Domestic Product (GDP) data for the second quarter (Q2) that suggested fears of easing economic recovery in the world’s biggest industrial player. Considering China’s status as one of the biggest oil users, downbeat economic concerns about the dragon nation weigh on the commodity price and underpin the USD/CAD rebound.
On a different page, the US Dollar Index (DXY) edges higher around 100.05, after bouncing off the 15-month low surrounding 99.55 the previous day. In doing so, the greenback’s gauge versus the six major currencies struggles to justify dovish Fed concerns. That said, the latest Reuters poll of around 109 economists suggests that the Fed’s widely anticipated 25 basis points (bps) rate hike in July will be the last increase of the current tightening cycle.
The Fed chatters, however, allow the markets to remain positive together with the headlines from China suggesting that the Sino-American ties are not deteriorating further, even if the progress is minimal.
It should be noted that the share prices of the top-tier US banks like Bank of America, Morgan Stanley and Bank of New York Mellon Corp rallied on Tuesday and favored the risk-on mood amid news that higher interest rates had helped boost profits in the second quarter, shared via Reuters.
Although the 1.3100 round figure puts a floor under the USD/CAD price, a convergence of the 10-SMA and 21-SMA on the daily chart, around 1.3220, restricts the short-term rebound of the Loonie pair.