"Canadian currency closed out the North American session at 85.38 US cents (C$1.1712) on Wednesday. This compares with Tuesday's closing mark of 85.53 US cents (C$1.1692).
Analysts said stronger commodity prices kept the Canadian dollar afloat Wednesday, despite the downward pull that lasted from Tuesday's Federal Reserve interest rate announcement.
Wednesday afternoon saw Bank of Canada Governor David Dodge speak to the New York Association for Business Economics. In his speech and news conference afterward, Dodge kept his remarks mostly to broader, global issues.
The CDN$ market factor for the day came from comments made by Dodge. Addressing a group in New York today, the CDN central bank chief said that the standard of huge global imbalances could lead to a global recession, or at the least a slow down, in the near future. This grim forecast was a double-edged sword for the Canadian economy. If, on the one hand, economies began to address and correct the global imbalances; the Canadian economy's dependency on its strong export market would see a large divot taken out of its GDP. On the other hand, allowing the imbalances to persist - and slowing the global economy - would similarly dry up global demand that has been the bread and butter for many Canadian raw-material producers that ship their goods abroad.
Market watchers are expecting much activity in the next two sessions, as Canada's January gross domestic product data will be released Friday."
"European session hours drove the loonie to 1.1750 for the first time in since January 19th. This level has contained dollar exuberance since December of last year, and it played its part once again in today's rally. While the daily time-framed chart illustrates a clear and steady decline in the Canadian dollar, the intra-day chart has shown increasing pressure to turn the loonie back on a bullish avenue. Swings in the USDCAD throughout the day have presented lower highs, while horizontal support at 1.1710 was hammered with multiple tests."
(Canada's Dodge Spreads Gloom To Currency Mar 29, 2006 (DailyFX via COMTEX) & Canadian Forex/Bond Review: C$ Weaker WINNIPEG, MB, Mar 29, 2006 (Resource News International via COMTEX)http://news.tradingcharts.com/futures/8/0/77126108.html
Where will this info lead the CDN$?
Analysts said stronger commodity prices kept the Canadian dollar afloat Wednesday, despite the downward pull that lasted from Tuesday's Federal Reserve interest rate announcement.
Wednesday afternoon saw Bank of Canada Governor David Dodge speak to the New York Association for Business Economics. In his speech and news conference afterward, Dodge kept his remarks mostly to broader, global issues.
The CDN$ market factor for the day came from comments made by Dodge. Addressing a group in New York today, the CDN central bank chief said that the standard of huge global imbalances could lead to a global recession, or at the least a slow down, in the near future. This grim forecast was a double-edged sword for the Canadian economy. If, on the one hand, economies began to address and correct the global imbalances; the Canadian economy's dependency on its strong export market would see a large divot taken out of its GDP. On the other hand, allowing the imbalances to persist - and slowing the global economy - would similarly dry up global demand that has been the bread and butter for many Canadian raw-material producers that ship their goods abroad.
Market watchers are expecting much activity in the next two sessions, as Canada's January gross domestic product data will be released Friday."
"European session hours drove the loonie to 1.1750 for the first time in since January 19th. This level has contained dollar exuberance since December of last year, and it played its part once again in today's rally. While the daily time-framed chart illustrates a clear and steady decline in the Canadian dollar, the intra-day chart has shown increasing pressure to turn the loonie back on a bullish avenue. Swings in the USDCAD throughout the day have presented lower highs, while horizontal support at 1.1710 was hammered with multiple tests."
(Canada's Dodge Spreads Gloom To Currency Mar 29, 2006 (DailyFX via COMTEX) & Canadian Forex/Bond Review: C$ Weaker WINNIPEG, MB, Mar 29, 2006 (Resource News International via COMTEX)http://news.tradingcharts.com/futures/8/0/77126108.html
Where will this info lead the CDN$?
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