Home Daily Commentaries CAD holding up well despite Trump’s continued tough talk on NAFTA

CAD holding up well despite Trump’s continued tough talk on NAFTA

Daily Currency Update

After a shaky start, the Canadian Dollar had a pretty good week before Easter, only kept off top spot by the strength of the US Dollar. USD/CAD opened last Monday at 1.2890 and by Tuesday morning in Europe it had fallen 70 pips to what proved to be the low of the week around 1.2820. The next few days saw very whippy price action, albeit within a relatively narrow range from USD/CAD1.2820 to 1.2930. It had many intra-day swings and reversals without really gaining traction in either direction, though this allowed the CAD to strengthen on all of its major crosses as it ended the week around USD/CAD1.2895. Overnight in Asia, the pair briefly touched 1.29 again but the move higher was not sustained and it has subsequently eased back around a quarter of a cent.





Although President Trump’s latest ‘Tweetstorm’ was aimed directly at Mexico, there was also a renewed threat to kill-off the NAFTA accord. Trump said: “Mexico is doing very little, if not NOTHING, at stopping people from flowing into Mexico through their Southern Border, and then into the U.S. They laugh at our dumb immigration laws. They must stop the big drug and people flows, or I will stop their cash cow, NAFTA.” Behind the President’s headlines, however, politicians from the U.S., Canada and Mexico are showing increasing optimism they can reach a deal as negotiators prepare for what would be the eighth round of talks. The U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said last week, “If there’s a real effort made to try to close out and to compromise and do some of the things we all know we should do, I’m optimistic we can get something done in principle in the next little bit.” Canada’s chief negotiator, Steve Verheul, said he didn’t know what an “in principle’’ deal would look like and “significant gaps” remain. The desire for faster talks hasn’t yet been followed up with Canada and Mexico being given a firm date or an invitation to attend the next round of talks expected in April in Washington.



Away from NAFTA and back on the economy, the week ahead brings the Canadian employment report on Friday, published at the same time as the US jobs report. Before then, today we get to see the manufacturing PMI report for March, which last month stood at 55.6. The Canadian Dollar opens in North America at USD/CAD1.2875, AUD/CAD0.9890 and GBP/CAD1.8105.

Key Movers

The last week was a positive one for the US Dollar which just beat its Canadian cousin into top spot overall, rising against all the major currencies we follow here and reaching a near-10 day high on Thursday just above 89.75. Parts of Asia and virtually the whole of Europe is away for the Easter Monday holiday today, though the US stock and bond markets are open and foreign exchange markets have been trading for more than 12 hours. A higher GBP and slightly stronger EUR are weighing on the USD this morning and its index against a basket of currencies is around a quarter of a point down from Friday’s close at 89.45.





Both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 index ended lower in Q1, with their first quarterly losses since Q3 2015. On Monday last week, investors were nervously watching to see if the indices would break their 200-day moving averages and move down through the lows of early February. Instead, the stock market rallied almost 3% on the day (its best one-day performance in 2½ years) and though it gave back much of these gains on Tuesday, there was a genuine sense of relief that a potentially more serious correction lower had been avoided. As we begin the second quarter, the big level to watch is 2550 on the S&P 500. This marked the low on Tuesday February 6th and is around 90 points below last week’s close. As long as this level holds, the ‘dip-buyers’ will take comfort from the price action. If it fails, then the market will already be down 11% from its end-January peak and the ‘healthy correction’ could turn into something much less benign.



Once all last week’s incoming economic numbers were crunched, the Atlanta Fed revised upwards its forecast of Q1 GDP from an annualized pace of 1.8% to 2.4%. This morning we’ll see both versions of the March manufacturing surveys (PMI and ISM) as well as the February construction spending numbers and the Atlanta Fed will update its model estimate tomorrow. We mention this because it has over the last few years been one of the accurate forecasters of the official GDP number and the model has the advantage of being updated in real-time as new information is received. The USD index opens this morning in North America around 89.45.


In the week before Easter, the EUR traced out a similar pattern to most of the non-USD currencies, rallying on Monday but then giving back all its gains, and more, in the latter part of the week. It opened around USD1.2355 and went on to hit a best level on Tuesday just under 1.2475. From then on, however, the euro lost almost 2 cents to a low on Thursday afternoon just below 1.2290; its lowest since March 21st. A late session rally saw it back on to a 1.23 ‘big figure’ and it ended the week around USD1.2320. Overnight in Asia and this morning in Europe, EUR/USD has traded in a narrow range from 1.2310 to 1.2330 with EUR/CAD around a quarter of a cent down from Friday’s close at 1.5875.



Preliminary estimates of inflation in the Eurozone last week showed German HICP (the measure which is a harmonized calculation across all EU Member States) was 1.5% y/y whilst in France it jumped from 1.3% to 1.7%; well above most estimates of a 1.5% annual increase. Away from the headline measures of orders and activity, the main interest in this week’s manufacturing and service sector PMI data will be on whether there are growing signs of price pressure which might help move the official measures of inflation nearer towards the ECB’s target of “close to but just below 2%.”



The head of the Dutch Central Bank, Klaas Knot, said in an interview on Thursday that the Bank was at risk of normalizing policy too slowly. Considered a hawk on the ECB’s Governing Council, Knot said he was comfortable with market expectations for an end to bond buys in the fourth quarter and a first interest rate hike since mid-2011 in the second quarter of next year. For all the tough talk, however, the latest figures show the ECB actually stepped up its buying of government and corporate bonds in the week ended March 23rd. According to calculations by Goldman Sachs, after averaging €1.4 billion in weekly corporate bond purchases year-to-date, the ECB purchased €2.2 billion - 55% above their 2018 average and nearly double the €1.26BN in purchases from the prior week - in an effort to calm the market just as yields blew out. The EUR opens in North America today at USD1.2325 and EUR/CAD1.5880.


The British Pound had a poor week pre-Easter which started pretty well but then turned sour after a series of soft economic data. From a high of 1.4240 on Tuesday, it fell to a low on Good Friday morning of 1.4015; its lowest since March 21st and the GBP finished as the worst performer on the week, falling against every one of the major currencies we follow closely here. Overnight in Asia and this morning in Europe, the pound has recovered all of Friday’s losses and now sits at the top of our leaderboard: an exact repeat of the price action one week ago before its data-driven slump.



The second revision to the UK’s Q4 GDP numbers last week didn’t contain any surprises, with quarterly growth unchanged at +0.4% and the annual rate at just 1.4% after 1.8% in Q3. Even with the significant depreciation of the GBP after the EU referendum back in June 2016, net trade was still estimated to have subtracted around 0.4% from GBP; a worse performance than after all other big depreciations of sterling in the post-war period. The Easter weekend was a complete washout for most of the country and will have been especially tough for a retail sector which has already seen a number of high-profile casualties this year. Expect to hear more pain here.



The economic data highlights for the week ahead will be the various PMI surveys (manufacturing, construction and services) released between Tuesday and Thursday. The British Pound opens in North America at USD1.4050, GBP/EUR1.1395 and GBP/CAD1.8100.


The Australian Dollar lost ground last week, though not as much as at one point seemed likely. It tumbled to a fresh 2018 low of USD0.7645 early on Thursday but a combination of decent economic data locally and a rally in global stock markets helped lift AUD/USD briefly on to a 77 cents ‘big figure’ on Good Friday. The Aussie was unable to sustain this level, however, and slipped back to end the week around 0.7680. Overnight in Asia and this morning in Europe, it has traded between 0.7675 and 0.7695 with the AUD/CAD cross slipping back on to 98 cents.



Chinese economic data released over the weekend had mixed messages for Australia which sends a large portion of its exports there. The official manufacturing PMI number came in at a stronger than expected 51.5, well above February’s 50.3. Unfortunately, the private sector PMI measure out this morning then printed at 51.0, below both the 51.7 expected and the previous month’s 51.6. The so-called The Caixin/Markit PMI was the weakest reading since November and signaled only a marginal improvement in operating conditions at the end of the first quarter. It suggested output and new orders grew only modestly in March, with growth in export orders slumping to a 10-month low even as fears grow of a possible trade war between the United States and China. The survey cited subdued foreign demand, and did not mention if there had been any impact yet from escalating trade tensions.



For the week ahead, the next RBA Board Meeting is tomorrow, April 3rd. The main point of interest will be how many times the accompanying Statement uses the words ‘slow’ and ‘gradual’ to describe the pick-up in economic activity, consumer spending, wages and inflation. The February retail sales data will also be watched closely on Wednesday to see whether the continued rise in employment (notwithstanding a rise in the jobless rate) has led consumers to open their wallets. The Australian Dollar opens in North America this morning at USD0.7695, with AUD/NZD at 1.0630 and AUD/CAD0.9915.


The volatility which has been a feature of the flightless bird ever since Christmas showed no sign of easing last week. The New Zealand Dollar topped our one-day performance chart on Thursday for the second time, having on Wednesday been in bottom place. On Tuesday, the NZD spent a few minutes on a US 73 cents ‘big figure’ but then fell to a low on Thursday morning around 0.7190 before rallying almost half a cent into Friday’s close at 0.7235. Overnight the pair has been unusually steady with barely 15 pips covering its high-low range either side of Friday’s close.



In their latest economic review, the analysts at ANZ Bank say that NZ economy is likely to grow broadly around trend for the next couple of years, with the unemployment rate set to remain low.

“It is hardly a negative story. We see wage growth gradually lifting off lows, corresponding with a modest broadening in domestic inflation pressures in time. That lift should eventually see the RBNZ join other central banks in removing monetary policy stimulus. However, we feel strongly that it will be late to that party, with the first hike not until the second half of 2019… While funding market pressures both here and abroad are creating some angst, we don’t believe local pressures will escalate. We see scope for local short-end rates to fall modestly in the near term, but NZ-US 10-year spreads to push more clearly negative. We expect downward pressure on the NZD over the course of 2018, especially against G4 currencies. NZD/AUD has threatened to break higher, but we see it remaining range-bound.”



There are no top-tier economic numbers scheduled for release in New Zealand this week, but as we’ve often noted here, the Kiwi Dollar is quite volatile enough even without the distractions of incoming data! It opens in North America today at USD0.7235 and NZD/CAD0.9320.

Expected Ranges

  • USD/CAD: 1.2825 - 1.2940 ▼
  • CAD/EUR: 0.6270 - 0.6320 ▼
  • CAD/GBP: 0.5495 - 0.5540 ▼
  • CAD/AUD: 1.0070 - 1.0150 ▼
  • CAD/NZD: 1.0675 - 1.0770 ▼