Daily Currency Update
CAD - Canadian DollarThe Loonie rallies decisively following robust labour data. According to Statistics Canada, employment increased by 81,000 in August, mainly in part-time work, following three consecutive months of little change. The unemployment rate remained at 5.7 percent as more people participated in the labour market. Compared with August 2018, employment increased by 471,000 (+2.5 percent), which was the result of gains in both full-time and part-time work. Over the same period, hours worked increased by 1.2 percent.The robust labour data released today as well as the speech from Deputy Governor Lawrence Schembri yesterday, who discussed the key points of the BoC decision, support the BoC’s position as the least dovish central bank of the G10 today. Deputy Governor Schembri explained that the Canadian economy continued to show strength while the global backdrop weakened. This is what Schembri hinted at yesterday when he said, “At this point, our labour force would be fully employed, and the economy overall would be using all of its productive capacity.” He also said that the relationship between growth and inflation still exists in Canada, which is different in the rest of developed economies, as inflation rates in the United States and other advanced economies have been lower in recent years than you might have expected given relatively strong growth. The USD/CAD pair falls 0.37 percent (stronger Loonie) at the time of this writing, and it is ignoring the weakness in crude oil today.
Key Movers
In the flip side, the Greenback gets hammered following disappointing labor data. The U.S. dollar index declines 0.12 percent this morning, driven by U.S. payrolls climbing 130,000 in August, but missing the expected number of 163,000. According to Reuters, U.S. job growth slowed more than expected in August, with retail hiring declining for a seventh straight month. However, substantial wage gains should support consumer spending and keep the economy expanding moderately amid rising threats from trade tensions. While the U.S. and China agreed to hold high-level talks in early October in Washington, the uncertainty continues, and this is affecting business confidence. At the same time, manufacturing employment rose by a moderate 3,000 jobs last month after increasing 4,000 in July.
Expected Ranges
- USD/CAD: 1.3136 - 1.3249 ▼
- EUR/CAD: 1.4522 - 1.4611 ▼
- GBP/CAD: 1.6207 - 1.6363 ▼
- AUD/CAD: 0.8987 - 0.9060 ▲
- NZD/CAD: 0.8424 - 0.8493 ▲