USD/CAD: Canadian Dollar Lower After Oil Falters

 | Oct 13, 2017 09:40

The Canadian dollar depreciated on Thursday due to a report by the International Energy Agency that dampened the energy market’s optimism on demand growth. The IEA numbers put demand for Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) crude would be at around 32.5 million barrels, which is 150,000 barrels below current production levels. The OPEC and other major producers agreed to cut output and it seems that even after that supply is still higher than demand.

Canadian home resale prices dropped to a seven-year low, while new home prices remained flat. The major catalyst of the Canadian real estate cool down was the Bank of Canada's (BoC) two rate hikes so far in 2017. The central bank remains cautious about what even higher rates could do to households that are carrying record levels of debt, particularly in mortgages.

The U.S. dollar traded higher versus the loonie after U.S. data posted strong gains. U.S. producer prices rose by the most in six months. The PPI was up 0.40 percent in September and comes at a time when the market is giving more weight to inflation data. The data is particularly strong considering the weather played a huge factor during that period.

The fourth round of NAFTA negotiations will kick off in Virginia this week. The Trump administration has played hardball ahead and during the negotiations with even the U.S. Chamber of Commerce saying that rules of origin demands could torpedo the talks.