Canadian Dollar Lower on Monday Ahead of U.S. Jobs Numbers

 | Aug 28, 2017 17:03

The Canadian dollar started the week in a tight range against the U.S. dollar. Hurricane Harvey continues to wreak havoc in Texas and has hit the energy sector as it has forced refineries to close and has sent gasoline prices soaring. The U.S. dollar staged a comeback near the end of the Monday trading session and is looking ahead at the economic calendar release for further support. U.S. President Donald Trump also sent a tweet calling the NAFTA approach of Canada and Mexico as very difficult. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke about Trump’s comments on Monday, saying there was nothing new and vowed to remain at the negotiating table to modernize the agreement.

The NAFTA pairs remain under pressure against the USD with the peso dropping 1.281 percent and the USD gaining 0.163 versus the CAD. The USD was left rudderless last week as the Fed Chief Janet Yellen chose to comment on regulation on what could be her last appearance as central bank chair at the Jackson Hole summit. U.S. employment data is the highlight this week, with a special emphasis on wage growth data to look for signs of inflation.

U.S. employment will guide markets as the ADP private payrolls report to be released on Wednesday, Aug. 30, at 8:15 a.m. starts the jobs data rollout. Analysts are forecasting a 186,000-job gain following the 178,000 jobs added in July. The biggest indicator will be released on Friday, Sept. 1, at 8:30 a.m., when the Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes the U.S. non-farm payrolls (NFP). The last two months have exceeded expectations and the market is anticipating a 180,000 addition of new positions in August. Inflation data in the job reports will be highlighted as the Fed appears to be slowing down on its tightening policy as wages and prices remain sluggish even as the number of jobs have been steady throughout the recovery.