Starting with sterling, the British pound to Canadian dollar exchange rate (GBPCAD) nosed above 1.91 in late May trade to extend is correction from the April trough. GBP-CAD remains tipped to attack the 2.0 level as technical momentum is advocating for further advances.
“We have been looking for a bounce to the 1.90/1.92 area to come through fairly quickly and continue to target 2.00/2.02 as a medium-term objective. Intraday weakness quickly reversed so far today and we think GBPCAD remains on track for more gains. Look to buy into modest GBP dips from here; medium and longer-term trend momentum studies are positively aligned for the GBP, implying that short-term corrective gains should be limited,” says analyst Shaun Osborne who has updated us with his latest Canadian dollar forecasts.
“A softening oil price, allied to supportive CAD US front-end spreads, suggests the gains have yet to run their course, in the process suggesting we are set to test strong resistance at 1.2388 (lows from April 8),” says Jeremy Stretch at CIBC.
Driving the rebuilding of positive sentiment in the US Dollar is ongoing Fed rhetoric that warns of interest rate rises commencing in 2015.
Following on from Yellen at the end of last week we have had vice Chair Fischer and Mester hitting the airwaves. The Fed chair of Cleveland, who is a Fed voter in ‘16, argues that ‘the time is near’ for the central bank to raise rates.
Look for an improvement in US data points in June to provide the necessary confirmation the USD has actually turned the corner, this could pave the way for deeper and sustained gains in USD-CAD as the longer-term trend of USD appreciation restarts.
The BoC has signalled that it is comfortable with the current level of interest rates and its January rate cut has bought it some “insurance” against disinflationary risks.
“Economic activity has stabilised recently and the bounce back in oil prices has also been a positive. However, the recent appreciation of the CAD (REER has appreciated by more than 4% since early April) offsets some of these improvements,” say Barclays in a currency note on the matter.
Furthermore, Barclays believe the effect of lower oil prices on investment and consequently growth will be long lasting, whereas higher unit labour costs in the manufacturing sector are likely to impede the economy’s ability to take advantage of a weaker currency.
“We remain bullish on USDCAD over the coming months and remain short CADMXN,” say Barclays.
CIBC’s Stretch does however caution that there is the possibility of a strengthening in the CAD:
“The BoC's increasing optimism as regards the H2 outlook may provide some rationale for the market having moved net long of CAD for the first time since late September. A more upbeat BoC, downplaying the need for additional monetary insurance now may help to cap USD CAD topside ahead of 1.2400/10.”