Canadian dollar to rally; trade deal clips economic worry: Reuters poll

Reuters  |  TORONTO 

By Smith

The loonie has rallied as much as 2.3 percent against the U.S. dollar since last Thursday, helped by a last-minute deal to salvage NAFTA. On Monday, it touched its strongest in more than four months at C$1.2783.

The latest poll of more than 50 market strategists predicted the currency would dip to C$1.2800 to the greenback, or 78.13 U.S. cents, in three months, from the C$1.2878 it was trading around on Thursday.

The currency is then expected to climb to C$1.2500 in a year, stronger than the C$1.2600 forecast in September's poll.

"We are looking for the Canadian dollar to strengthen over the next 12 months," said Eric Theoret, a at

Removing the threat of tariffs on autos clears "a huge cloud of uncertainty" for the economy and could give businesses the confidence to invest in new assets, Theoret said.

U.S. threatened to impose tariffs on Canadian autos if a trade deal was not reached. The Bank of forecast in July that trade uncertainty could subtract about two-thirds of a percent from by the end of 2020.

With the trade deal clinched, investors have raised bets for as many as four additional interest rate increases from the Bank of by the end of 2019.

"We now have the Bank of hiking four times over the next 12 months, which will definitively put Canadian rates above everyone else except for the U.S.," said Greg Anderson, at in "What that tends to do is attract capital into Canada."

Foreign investment could also flow to Canada if the country resolve difficulties it faces in expanding the pipeline, Anderson said.

Canada will not appeal a court ruling that overturned its approval of the pipeline project, opting instead for more consultations with aboriginal groups unhappy about the plan, a top said on Wednesday.

The price of oil, one of Canada's major exports, climbed on Wednesday to its highest since November 2014.

A larger-than-usual discount for Canada's heavy crude has reduced some benefit for Canada of prices.

Select (WCS) traded on Tuesday for $42 per barrel less than Intermediate light oil, near its biggest differential in data going back to 2010, according to

But expects the discount to narrow over the next one to two years and for the U.S. dollar to weaken, boosting commodity prices.

"Canada will get to benefit on the back of an improvement in our terms of trade," Theoret said.

(Other stories from the global foreign exchange poll:)

(Reporting by Smith; Polling by Indradip Ghosh and Sarmista Sen; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, October 04 2018. 18:19 IST