The Canadian Dollar (CAD) is down once again on Wednesday, adding to yesterday’s declines and sending the USD/CAD back into the 1.2800 handle as the Bank of Canada (BoC) holds rates steady as markets broadly expected.
The Bank of Canada (BoC) held its main reference rate at 5.0% Wednesday morning like Wall Street broadly predicted, but dovish comments from BoC Governor Tiff Macklem are failing to spark much confidence in the Loonie.
The BoC is expecting “two or three quarters” of negative growth as a recession looms over the Canadian economy, with Governor Macklem specifically noting that odds of achieving a soft landing are beginning to decrease.
Broad-market risk aversion is the name of the game as Tuesday’s risk-off flows continue for a second day, sending the US Dollar (USD) higher. Crude Oil prices, however, are finding a floor for Wednesday, helping to limit losses for the oil-backed CAD.
The Canadian Dollar (CAD) is extending the week’s risk-off backslide as traders return toward the US Dollar (USD), with the BoC’s showing briefly sending the USD/CAD into 1.3810 on reaction.
The Loonie-Dollar pairing is treading water just beneath the 1.3800 handle, and Tuesday’s topside push extends yesterday’s rebound from the 200-hour Simple Moving Average (SMA). USD/CAD has hit a fresh seven-month high.
On the daily candlesticks, USD/CAD continues to push higher, bolstered by a rising 50-day SMA pushing into 1.3600 on the chart paper. The floor on any bearish corrections is priced in from the 200-day SMA near 1.3475.
The immediate ceiling on a bullish continuation sits at early March’s peak of 1.3861, and a break of this level would set a new high for the year on the USD/CAD as the Loonie waffles.