Canadian Dollar Weakens to Within 1 Cent of Parity as Oil Falls

hoodratz47

Active member
hey gnartron.. i can copy and paste also!

oh and whats up canada

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Canada's dollar fell for the first time in three days, weakening to within one cent of parity with its U.S. counterpart, as oil and copper dropped on speculation a global slowdown will hamper demand for raw materials.

The Canadian currency extended its loss versus the greenback as the euro erased gains after an Austrian parliamentary committee delayed a vote on an increase in Europe's bailout program, fueling speculation the region's debt crisis will worsen.

"It's not a promising sign," John Curran, a senior vice president at CanadianForex Ltd., an online foreign-exchange dealer, said by phone from Toronto. "It should promote risk aversion. There's a slight move toward purchasing U.S. dollars across the board."

The Canadian dollar, nicknamed the loonie for the image of the aquatic bird on the C$1 coin, depreciated 0.6 percent to 99.14 cents per U.S. dollar at 1:36 p.m. in Toronto, compared with 98.57 cents yesterday. It weakened as much as 0.8 percent to 99.40 cents. It traded at C$1.0027 two days ago, the lowest since Jan. 31. One Canadian dollar buys $1.0087.

"I don't know why the Canadian dollar is stronger than par," Curran said. "All we have to do is chew through some resting orders in corporate Canada and other interested parties up around that level. Once we break there, we're off to the races, and C$1.03 is our target."

Austrian Delay

The greenback pared losses against the euro after the Austrian parliament's finance committee rejected adding an overhaul of the European Financial Stability Facility to the agenda of a meeting today.

Austria's parliament will now call a special meeting for the finance committee that will have the item on the agenda, according to Harald Waiglein, a spokesman for the ministry. The date could still be in September, he said.

Canadian government bonds were little changed. The benchmark 10-year security yielded 2.21 percent. The price of the 3.25 percent note maturing in June 2021 rose 8 cents to C$109.07.

The government drew an average yield of 0.954 percent today at its auction of C$3.5 billion ($3.53 billion) of two-year notes. The 1.5 percent securities due in November 2013 attracted $8.86 billion in bids, according to a statement on the Bank of Canada's website.

Oil Declines

Canada's currency fell versus nine of its 16 most-traded counterparts as crude oil, the nation's biggest export, dropped to $88.80 a barrel in New York from yesterday's one-month high of $90.52, and copper slid 1.6 percent to $8,630 a metric ton. Zinc, lead and tin also declined.

The loonie gained 1.8 percent over the past week against nine other developed-nation currencies traded by Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Currency Indexes. The greenback rose 2.7 percent. The U.S. is Canada's biggest trade partner.

The Asian Development Bank cut its growth forecast for its region, dimming the prospects for raw materials, which account for about half of Canada's export revenue.

The loonie's one-month correlation coefficient with crude reached 0.82 today, approaching the reading of 0.88 it touched in November 2009, which was the highest in at least a decade, Bloomberg data show. A reading of 1 indicates the measures move in lockstep.

"It's most likely to be a buy-on-dips mentality that will prevail as far as dollar-Canada is concerned," Jeremy Stretch, executive director of foreign-exchange strategy at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, said by phone from London. "There's still huge amounts of uncertainty out there."

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2011/09/13/bloomberg1376-LRIGBS0YHQ0X01-5J2QMGOJ5V65204FK7LR1DSO2R.DTL#ixzz1atzH45hY
 
Also keep in touch with what the Eruo will do when Greece defaults. I'm excited to see how much it will depreciate the euro.
 
so when I get canadian change back when I use my US currency in canada, I'll technically be getting more back still? or did it drop below 1 dollar? confusing read was confusing
 
Just did it right meow, one Canadian dollar is equal to $1.01 US dollars. So it is more cheap for Canadians to come to the US, rather than the Americans to go to Canada, Well just by 1cent lol
 
They probably will haha. I know Germany is carrying some of thier debt and will be hurt too when greece defaults but it wont be bad because germany is the best country right now in the EU.
 
Some, but not nearly as much as I wished I was. I started shorting futures as soon as news broke about Greece and Ireland- but when you short news, you're probably too late. I thought the euro wasn't about to dip completely due to the amount of countries in the EU. I've made some small profits but they've all been via my own funds, and I've got a few stocks as well as some later options worth holding onto so I haven't put much into shorting.
 
yeah when i went in july it seemed like it was higher than that

i was probably just getting ripped off by mean shop owning asian people in vancouver though
 
Lol at Americans complaining about the shit costing more when they visit Canada... Now you know how we feel! Everytime I buy anything online I end up paying more...
 
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