USD/CAD Canadian Dollar Reacts To Strong Housing Starts, U.S. Tax Reform Concerns

 | Nov 09, 2017 10:13

The Canadian dollar rose on Wednesday with positive housing data and U.S. crude prices steady above $56. The trading week has brought little data so investors were happy to digest some positive news out of Canada. Housing starts rose to 222,771 on an annual bases in October. Building permits also rose by 3.8 percent in September. Condos are the main drivers of that growth, which took forecasters by surprise given the slowdown in Canadian real estate after the changes to mortgage rules and foreign investment.

While most media has been busy covering NAFTA, the other trade agreement under review by Canada, the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP), was having a moment as the 11 remaining members met in Vietnam. U.S. President Donald Trump took the States out of the agreement early in his presidency, and Japan has assumed the leadership role seeking a commitment from members. Canada and Mexico will be looking at the TPP as an alternative if NAFTA trade talks go badly, but will not commit this early without knowing the fate of the trade deal with the United States.

The price of oil is struggling to remain bullish with a surprise buildup in U.S. weekly inventories. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) production cut agreement with other major producers has been offset by higher levels of drilling by U.S. shale producers. OPEC expects shale numbers to go higher, but be offset by higher demand.