Canadiandollar
USD-CAD Resistance Ahead! Sell!
Hello,Traders!
USD-CAD is going up to retest a horizontal resistance
And the pair seems to be locally overbought
So I think that after the retest
We will see a move down
Towards the support level below
Sell!
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GBP-CAD Long From Support! Buy!
Hello,Traders!
GBP-CAD has retested a horizontal support level
And we are already seeing a bullish rebound
So I think that the bullish move up will continue
Towards the local target above
Buy!
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See other ideas below too!
USD CAD - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSUSD
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: WEAK BULLISH
1. Monetary Policy
In May the Fed delivered on hawkish expectations by hiking the Fed Funds Rate by 50bsp and also confirmed that the committee expects further 50bsp hikes to be appropriate. The fed also stuck to a familiar hawkish tone by downplaying the prospects of an imminent recession by explaining that even though the economy contracted in Q1, that household spending and business investment remained strong. The Chair also stuck to their guns regarding the rate path by suggesting that they think reaching neutral (currently estimated at 2.4%) before year-end would be appropriate and will assess the need for further hikes when they get there. There were however some less hawkish elements which saw a very classic ‘sell-the-fact’ reaction in major asset classes. The first one was on the Quantitative Tightening front where the bank decided on a phased approach for balance sheet reduction by starting the monthly caps at 30bn (treasuries) and 17.5bn ( MBS ) and pushing it up to the expected $60bn (treasuries) and $35bn ( MBS ) over a three-month timeframe. The second less hawkish element was comments from Chair Powell who took 75bsp hikes off the table saying the committee was not actively considering rate moves of that size. Interestingly, it seems STIR markets did not really believe the Fed as the probability of a 75bsp hike stood at >70% directly following the presser. All-in-all, the meeting provided a short-term ‘sell-the-fact’ opportunity, but also cemented the view that despite signs of a slowing economy and despite clear stress in financial markets, the Fed is sticking to their aggressive tightening for now.
2. Global & Domestic Economy
The USD’s global usage means it’s usually inversely correlated to the global economy and global trade. The USD usually appreciates when growth & inflation slows (disinflation) and depreciates when growth & inflation accelerates (reflation). Expectations of a cyclical slowdown have been USD positive. However, we think a lot of the growth concerns might be reflected in recent USD appreciation already. Furthermore, the USD has not been responding positively to bad data like we’ve seen from the start of the year. More recently we’ve seen the USD depreciate on bad data which could suggest that the USD’s driver has temporarily shifted away from the growth focus and shifted towards a Fed focus as the worse the incoming data becomes the higher the likelihood of a less aggressive Fed in the months ahead. Incoming data will be watched closely in relation to the infamous ‘Fed Put’. If growth data slows but not enough to stop the Fed’s hawkish path it’s USD positive, but if the data cause a Fed pivot that’ll be a big negative for the USD.
3. CFTC Analysis
An overall bearish positioning change across major participant categories last week. Aggregate USD positioning remains close to 1 standard deviation above the mean, and close to prior tops where the USD topped out in previous cycles. That means we don’t want to chase the USD higher from here in the short-term.
CAD
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: NEUTRAL
1. Monetary Policy
In June the BoC delivered on market expectations by hiking rates by 50bps to 1.75% and kept its QT process intact. The statement-only decision was interpreted as more hawkish than expected with the bank saying it was ‘prepared to act more forcefully if needed’ to meet its inflation target. This saw markets implying either a few more additional 50bsp hikes or potentially opening the door to 75bsp hikes. The bank also delivered a hawkish tone regarding price pressures, noting that risks of elevated inflation becoming entrenched had risen and price pressures was persisting well above target. The biggest surprise was the lack of any real concern regarding growth. Instead, the bank was very optimistic about activity by noting it was strong and still operating above trend. The lack of concern about the clear slowdown in growth in their biggest trading partner, and the lack of concerns about debt levels and the housing market was a big surprise for us. Instead of sounding concerned about falling house prices and its possible effect on the economy, they welcomed the drop as a sign that their normalisation process is taking effect. To summarize, the bank remained much more hawkish than we anticipated and means our neutral bias for the CAD is taking a bit of a beating as CAD continues to trade at 9-year highs at the index level.
2. Intermarket Analysis Considerations
Oil’s impressive post-covid recovery has been driven by many factors such as supply & demand , global demand recovery, and more recently geopolitical concerns. At current prices the risk to demand destruction and stagflation is high, which means we remain cautious of oil in the med-term . Reason for caution: Synchronised policy tightening targeting demand, slowing growth, consensus longs, steep backwardation curve, heightened implied volatility . We remain cautious oil , but geopolitics are a key driver and focus for Petro-currencies like the CAD (even though the CAD-Oil correlation has been hit and miss).
3. Global Risk Outlook
As a high-beta currency, the CAD usually benefits from overall positive risk sentiment as well as environments that benefit pro-cyclical assets. Thus, both short-term (immediate) and med-term (underlying) risk sentiment will always be a key consideration for the CAD.
4. CFTC Analysis
Positioning was more mixed last week for the CAD, but we continue to think that markets are setting up a similar path compared to April 2021, Oct 2021 and Jan 2022 where markets were too aggressive to price in CAD upside only to see majority of it unwind later. As always though, timing those shorts will be very important.
EUR CAD - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSEUR
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: NEUTRAL
1. Monetary Policy
The ECB used the April meeting as a place holder meeting for the most part by not announcing any additional policy tweaks. The plans to phase out the APP into Q3 remained intact by reducing purchases from 40bln to 30bln in May and then down to 20bln in June. Markets were leaning towards a slightly more hawkish take from the bank (given recent inflation pressures), but the lack of conviction to remove the conditionality regarding the APP removal was seen as dovish. President Lagarde added to this dovish tone by explaining that Q3 has three months and IF the bank stops the APP, it could happen July, August or September. This was an important statement as the difference between a July and September end could mean the difference between a Q3 or Q4 rate hike. The president also added to the dovish tone by stressing that risks for the economic outlook are tilted to the downside and have recently intensified with geopolitical and virus-related challenges. When asked about policy normalization, the president made a strange comment by saying it is premature to think about monpol normalisation. As the bank is currently embarking on normalization this comment seemed out of place and reaffirmed the overall dovish take from the meeting. There were the usual sources releases after the presser which said policymakers see a July hike as still possible after Thursday's meeting, which provided some reprieve. With inflation >7% and growth slowing, the June meeting which accompanies staff economic projections will be critical for markets to solidify whether expectations of 1 or 2 hikes this year is correct or not.
2. Economic – Health – Geopolitics
Growth differentials still favour the US over EU capital flows, but differentials have turned positive and remain positive against the UK. Given growing stagflation fears the ECB is in a tough spot, being forced to normalize policy to try and combat inflation but could as a result further damage growth. Ongoing EU fiscal discussions to possibly allow ‘green bonds’ NOT to count against budget deficits remains in focus, alongside debt issuance for energy purchases. If approved, it will offer a flood of fiscal support which would be positive for the EUR and EU equities. Geopolitics remain a focus point as well given the ongoing war in Ukraine, but after the initial geopolitical scares but have been trying to carve out a base. Proximity to the war and the impact of sanctions remains a risk if the situation deteriorates. With lots of negatives already priced, chasing lows on bad news is not as attractive as chasing the EUR higher on good news.
3. CFTC Analysis
Another very bullish signal with all three major categories seeing another week of net-long weekly changes. It seems as if all three categories added longs at the worst possible time last week as the EUR failed to garner much upside momentum. With recent growth & inflation differentials turning in favour of the EUR we prefer trading the EUR higher on good news as opposed to chasing it lower on bad news right now.
CAD
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: NEUTRAL
1. Monetary Policy
In June the BoC delivered on market expectations by hiking rates by 50bps to 1.75% and kept its QT process intact. The statement-only decision was interpreted as more hawkish than expected with the bank saying it was ‘prepared to act more forcefully if needed’ to meet its inflation target. This saw markets implying either a few more additional 50bsp hikes or potentially opening the door to 75bsp hikes. The bank also delivered a hawkish tone regarding price pressures, noting that risks of elevated inflation becoming entrenched had risen and price pressures was persisting well above target. The biggest surprise was the lack of any real concern regarding growth. Instead, the bank was very optimistic about activity by noting it was strong and still operating above trend. The lack of concern about the clear slowdown in growth in their biggest trading partner, and the lack of concerns about debt levels and the housing market was a big surprise for us. Instead of sounding concerned about falling house prices and its possible effect on the economy, they welcomed the drop as a sign that their normalisation process is taking effect. To summarize, the bank remained much more hawkish than we anticipated and means our neutral bias for the CAD is taking a bit of a beating as CAD continues to trade at 9-year highs at the index level.
2. Intermarket Analysis Considerations
Oil’s impressive post-covid recovery has been driven by many factors such as supply & demand , global demand recovery, and more recently geopolitical concerns. At current prices the risk to demand destruction and stagflation is high, which means we remain cautious of oil in the med-term . Reason for caution: Synchronised policy tightening targeting demand, slowing growth, consensus longs, steep backwardation curve, heightened implied volatility . We remain cautious oil , but geopolitics are a key driver and focus for Petro-currencies like the CAD (even though the CAD-Oil correlation has been hit and miss).
3. Global Risk Outlook
As a high-beta currency, the CAD usually benefits from overall positive risk sentiment as well as environments that benefit pro-cyclical assets. Thus, both short-term (immediate) and med-term (underlying) risk sentiment will always be a key consideration for the CAD.
4. CFTC Analysis
Positioning was more mixed last week for the CAD, but we continue to think that markets are setting up a similar path compared to April 2021, Oct 2021 and Jan 2022 where markets were too aggressive to price in CAD upside only to see majority of it unwind later. As always though, timing those shorts will be very important.
CADJPY Top confirmed. Huge success with previous pattern.The CADJPY pair has been trading within a Bullish Megaphone as outlined by our last analysis almost two months ago:
As you see the Fibonacci Channel helped to very efficiently identify the pressure points and the price moved exactly as per our trading strategy. As seen, it found support on the 1D MA50 (blue trend-line) and rebounded, imitating the pattern of March 15 - May 15 2021. Yesterday it almost hit the Higher Lows trend-line of the Megaphone and is being rejected currently. As the 1W RSI Double topped in the same fashion as late May, it is more likely that this was the top on the medium-term.
It is now that the Fibonacci levels will come in play again and if the pattern continues to replicate the 2021 one, expect a strong correction during the summer months towards the 1.5 Fib level, were the price should find support within the 1D MA200 (orange trend-line) and the 1W MA50 (red trend-line), or earlier if they rise faster.
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NznCad Long IdeaHello Traders, here is the full analysis for NzdCad , let me know in the comment section below if you have any questions.
The ellipse could represent a possible zone with good risk/reward to accumulate long position.
Please note that all the information and publications hera are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations. What you will find here, are only views of a Cat passionate about Finance.
AUDCAD Bearish unless the 1D MA200 breaksThe AUDCAD pair has been trading within a Channel Down pattern since the April 05 2022 High. Four days ago, it made a Lower High on the Channel Down and got rejected just below the 1D MA50 (blue trend-line), while also forming a Death Cross (when the MA50 crosses below the MA200). The 1D MACD is about to make a Bearish Cross, so it times well for a Sell trade to a new Lower Low, despite the significance of the 0.89100 Support, towards the 1.182 and 1.382 Fibonacci extension levels (the latter only if after a bounce the 0.89100 level rejects an uptrend attempt.
On the other hand, if the price breaks and closes an 1D candle above the 1D MA200 (orange trend-line), as it did in late February 2022, be ready to counter with a buy, targeting the 2.0 Fibonacci extension around 0.94500.
P.S. See a longer-term picture as presented by our last AUDCAD idea almost 2 months ago that based on a 2020/21 fractal, it hit its target:
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USDCAD Buy opportunity and counter trade if invalidatedThe USDCAD pair has been trading within a Channel Up since last September (2021). So far it has had three clear Higher Highs and two Higher Lows. Right now the price is very close to that Higher Lows (bottom) trend-line of the pattern and when the 1D MACD makes a Bullish Cross, it will be a confirmed buy.
The last symmetrical position for the pair was in Jan 13 - 20 2022, where the price rebounded without making a solid Higher Low. That rise reached higher than the 0.618 Fibonacci retracement level, so using that model, we are setting a medium-term target of 1.28625 on this pair.
On the other hand, be prepared to cut losses quickly if the price breaks below the Higher Lows trend-line of the Channel Down, and sell instead towards the -0.618 Fib extension (1.21750).
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Today’s Notable Sentiment ShiftsUSD – The dollar index retreated from earlier highs and fell on Tuesday as Wall Street stocks initial declines amid growing hopes that inflation may have peaked. Nevertheless, USDJPY still managed to hit its highest level in 20 years at 132.998.
CAD – The Canadian dollar strengthened to its highest level in nearly seven weeks on Tuesday as oil prices rose and Canadian bond yields climbed further above their US counterparts.
GBPCAD: Breakout & Bearish Continuation 🇬🇧🇨🇦
GBPCAD is trading in a long-term bearish trend.
The pair started to consolidate within a horizontal trading range in March.
On Friday, the price finally broke its support to the downside and closed below that.
I believe that it may trigger a bearish trend continuation.
Next goal for sellers - 1.555
❤️If you have any questions, please, ask me in the comment section.
Please, support my work with like, thank you!❤️
EUR CAD - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSEUR
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: NEUTRAL
1. Monetary Policy
The ECB used the April meeting as a place holder meeting for the most part by not announcing any additional policy tweaks. The plans to phase out the APP into Q3 remained intact by reducing purchases from 40bln to 30bln in May and then down to 20bln in June. Markets were leaning towards a slightly more hawkish take from the bank (given recent inflation pressures), but the lack of conviction to remove the conditionality regarding the APP removal was seen as dovish. President Lagarde added to this dovish tone by explaining that Q3 has three months and IF the bank stops the APP, it could happen July, August or September. This was an important statement as the difference between a July and September end could mean the difference between a Q3 or Q4 rate hike. The president also added to the dovish tone by stressing that risks for the economic outlook are tilted to the downside and have recently intensified with geopolitical and virus-related challenges. When asked about policy normalization, the president made a strange comment by saying it is premature to think about monpol normalisation. As the bank is currently embarking on normalization this comment seemed out of place and reaffirmed the overall dovish take from the meeting. There were the usual sources releases after the presser which said policymakers see a July hike as still possible after Thursday's meeting, which provided some reprieve. With inflation >7% and growth slowing, the June meeting which accompanies staff economic projections will be critical for markets to solidify whether expectations of 1 or 2 hikes this year is correct or not.
2. Economic – Health – Geopolitics
Growth differentials still favour the US over EU capital flows, but differentials have turned positive and remain positive against the UK. Given growing stagflation fears the ECB is in a tough spot, being forced to normalize policy to try and combat inflation but could as a result further damage growth. Ongoing EU fiscal discussions to possibly allow ‘green bonds’ NOT to count against budget deficits remains in focus, alongside debt issuance for energy purchases. If approved, it will offer a flood of fiscal support which would be positive for the EUR and EU equities. Geopolitics remain a focus point as well given the ongoing war in Ukraine, but after the initial geopolitical scares but have been trying to carve out a base. Proximity to the war and the impact of sanctions remains a risk if the situation deteriorates. With lots of negatives already priced, chasing lows on bad news is not as attractive as chasing the EUR higher on good news.
3. CFTC Analysis
Another very bullish signal with all three major categories seeing another week of net-long weekly changes. It seems as if all three categories added longs at the worst possible time last week as the EUR failed to garner much upside momentum. With recent growth & inflation differentials turning in favour of the EUR we prefer trading the EUR higher on good news as opposed to chasing it lower on bad news right now.
4. The Week Ahead
The main event for the EUR in the week ahead will be the ECB policy decision. However, after the flurry of comments from various ECB members over the past few weeks, the meeting is not likely going to offer many surprises or fireworks, unless President Lagarde messes up her communication again. Markets are already pricing in 4 hikes (100bsp of tightening) by the end of the year, with a 25bsp hike in July and September fully priced. Thus, the focus will more likely shift to what happens after September, whether there is any specific mention that rates could rise above 0% by the end of the year. Furthermore, with inflation where it is, there has been some ECB members who have been hinting that a 50bsp might be up for discussion. This seems unlikely to be an option that the GC would want to go for at this stage but is a key risk we need to build into our scenario planning. Any comments from Lagarde that suggests a 50bsp could be possible in July would arguably be enough to give the EUR a bit of a lift. What the bank has to say about the recent move in Bund yields, and more specifically the climb in things like BTP/ Bund spreads, will be important as well. With inflation as big of a problem as it Is right now, they can’t afford to stop their hiking posture just to save spreads (even though they are important). Thus, being on the lookout for her comments on the spreads will be important, especially if the bank might be contemplating a new type of tool(s) to ease some of the issues with the widening spreads. The other driver to watch in the week ahead is the USD. As close to 60% of the DXY has a EUR weighting, any big fluctuations in the Dollar as a result of the US CPI print needs to be kept in mind for the EUR in general in the week ahead. Even though geopolitics have not really been a big EUR mover, we should keep geopolitics in the back of our min as a possible short-term catalyst for the EUR.
CAD
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: NEUTRAL
1. Monetary Policy
In June the BoC delivered on market expectations by hiking rates by 50bps to 1.75% and kept its QT process intact. The statement-only decision was interpreted as more hawkish than expected with the bank saying it was ‘prepared to act more forcefully if needed’ to meet its inflation target. This saw markets implying either a few more additional 50bsp hikes or potentially opening the door to 75bsp hikes. The bank also delivered a hawkish tone regarding price pressures, noting that risks of elevated inflation becoming entrenched had risen and price pressures was persisting well above target. The biggest surprise was the lack of any real concern regarding growth. Instead, the bank was very optimistic about activity by noting it was strong and still operating above trend. The lack of concern about the clear slowdown in growth in their biggest trading partner, and the lack of concerns about debt levels and the housing market was a big surprise for us. Instead of sounding concerned about falling house prices and its possible effect on the economy, they welcomed the drop as a sign that their normalisation process is taking effect. To summarize, the bank remained much more hawkish than we anticipated and means our neutral bias for the CAD is taking a bit of a beating as CAD continues to trade at 9-year highs at the index level.
2. Intermarket Analysis Considerations
Oil’s impressive post-covid recovery has been driven by many factors such as supply & demand , global demand recovery, and more recently geopolitical concerns. At current prices the risk to demand destruction and stagflation is high, which means we remain cautious of oil in the med-term . Reason for caution: Synchronised policy tightening targeting demand, slowing growth, consensus longs, steep backwardation curve, heightened implied volatility . We remain cautious oil , but geopolitics are a key driver and focus for Petro-currencies like the CAD (even though the CAD-Oil correlation has been hit and miss).
3. Global Risk Outlook
As a high-beta currency, the CAD usually benefits from overall positive risk sentiment as well as environments that benefit pro-cyclical assets. Thus, both short-term (immediate) and med-term (underlying) risk sentiment will always be a key consideration for the CAD.
4. CFTC Analysis
Positioning was more mixed last week for the CAD, but we continue to think that markets are setting up a similar path compared to April 2021, Oct 2021 and Jan 2022 where markets were too aggressive to price in CAD upside only to see majority of it unwind later. As always though, timing those shorts will be very important.
5. The Week Ahead
For the Canadian Dollar the main focus in the week ahead will be employment data on Friday as well as ongoing developments in energy markets. Starting with oil prices, we know that the common correlation between Oil and the CAD has not been statistically significant over various lookback periods. However, that doesn’t mean we can ignore what is happening in commodity markets where Oil has seen further appreciation in recent sessions. As long as oil prices remain elevated, we would expect that to provide support for the CAD, but we need to keep the correlations in mind and understand that it has not been a key driver for the Petro-currency in recent weeks. As for the employment data, the biggest reaction will come from a miss as opposed to a beat. Why do we say that? Well, considering that markets have already priced in an aggressive policy path, and given the fact that the CAD is trading at 9-year highs, a beat won’t really chance much. However, a surprise miss, that pours some cold water on the BoC’s overly optimistic outlook for the economy could provide some decent downside in the CAD if the miss is big enough of course. Our preferred way to trade the CAD is still with pairs like AUDCAD and EURCAD , and with both of these two currencies having policy decisions we want to pay close attention to them this week.
AUD CAD - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSAUD
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: WEAK BULLISH
1. Monetary Policy
At the May policy decision, the RBA made a hawkish turn by raising the cash rate by 0.25% versus STIR expectations of a 15bsp move. Even though there were some hawkish takes looking for a 40bsp move, the 25bsp was still higher than consensus expectations. The bank noted that inflation pressures have risen more than they expected, even without a sharp rise in wages, and means that further increases in the cash rate will be required to bring inflation back in line with their target. They also surprised markets on the balance sheet side by announcing that they are starting passive QT by stopping the reinvestment of maturing bonds. The hawkish surprise was enough to see STIR markets price in >60% chance of a 50bsp hike for the June meeting despite comments from Gov Lowe who said they don’t preclude a bigger or smaller rate move than 25bsp in the future. All-in-all the decision from the RBA was hawkish and has finally kick started the bank’s hiking cycle and should provide support for the AUD in the med-term as long as the bank keeps tightening expectations intact.
2. Idiosyncratic Drivers & Intermarket Analysis
Apart from the RBA, there are 2 key drivers we’re watching for the med-term outlook: China – With the PBoC & CCP stepping up monetary and fiscal stimulus, any recovery in China usually bodes well for Australia (40% of exports goes to China). It has also meant that the virus situation in China posed short-term downside risks for AUD as it has pushed back recovery expectations. Thus, virus and stimulus developments in China remains key for the AUD. However, as long as recovery expectations in China remain intact, it bodes well for the med-term economic outlook for Australia as well. The AUKUS defence pact could see retaliation against Aussie goods and is worth keeping on the radar as well Commodities – Iron Ore (31%), Coal (14%) and LNG (10%) is more than 50% of Aussie exports, with the recent rise in prices giving the AUD a lot of support from a terms of trade perspective. As long as these key commodities remain supported it remains supportive for the AUD, but of course that also means any sizeable corrections will weigh on the AUD. Thus, geopolitical and China demand developments remain key focus points.
3. Global Risk Outlook
As a high-beta currency, the AUD usually benefits from overall positive risk sentiment as well as environments that benefit pro-cyclical assets. Thus, both short-term (immediate) and med-term (underlying) risk sentiment will always be a key consideration for the AUD.
4. CFTC Analysis
Very close to neutral signals for AUD positioning. Recent price action has been tricky with overall risk off sentiment and China growth concerns. That also means if risk sentiment can continue to find some reprieve this week it could see some short-term recovery in the AUD and will as always be a key focus for the week ahead.
5. The Week Ahead
For the AUD the focus for the week ahead will be on China, commodities, and the RBA policy decision. The covid situation in China remains important, and the hope is that either the government eases up more of the draconian restrictions or we see additional economic support. Commodities like Iron Ore and Coal prices will be eyed as usual, as both commodities have been struggling to hold onto any decent upside momentum. Any negative price action will be important for the AUD. We also have the RBA policy decision coming up on Tuesday, where markets are fully pricing in another 25bsp hike for the bank. Even though STIR markets are pricing in 30bsp of tightening, there is a few participants calling for a 40bsp hike given the growing inflation concerns and cost living squeeze facing Australia consumers. It would make sense for the RBA to learn from other central banks and slam on the breaks a bit harder as early as they can. The big risk to this view of course is the Q1 wage print which came in fairly soft and still a distance away from the RBA’s preferred 3.0% wage growth level. That might see the bank opting for a calmer 25bsp hike instead. An as expected 25bsp probably won’t be enough to give the AUD a lift, but a surprise aggressive tilt could be just what the doctor ordered to provide some upside for the AUD. As always, risk sentiment will also be in focus, especially after another stronger close for equities on Friday. Any continuation in that positive risk sentiment should offer some support for the AUD, while a resumption of the negative mood is expected to weigh on the currency.
CAD
FUNDAMENTAL BIAS: NEUTRAL
1. Monetary Policy
In June the BoC delivered on market expectations by hiking rates by 50bps to 1.75% and kept its QT process intact. The statement-only decision was interpreted as more hawkish than expected with the bank saying it was ‘prepared to act more forcefully if needed’ to meet its inflation target. This saw markets implying either a few more additional 50bsp hikes or potentially opening the door to 75bsp hikes. The bank also delivered a hawkish tone regarding price pressures, noting that risks of elevated inflation becoming entrenched had risen and price pressures was persisting well above target. The biggest surprise was the lack of any real concern regarding growth. Instead, the bank was very optimistic about activity by noting it was strong and still operating above trend. The lack of concern about the clear slowdown in growth in their biggest trading partner, and the lack of concerns about debt levels and the housing market was a big surprise for us. Instead of sounding concerned about falling house prices and its possible effect on the economy, they welcomed the drop as a sign that their normalisation process is taking effect. To summarize, the bank remained much more hawkish than we anticipated and means our neutral bias for the CAD is taking a bit of a beating as CAD continues to trade at 9-year highs at the index level.
2. Intermarket Analysis Considerations
Oil’s impressive post-covid recovery has been driven by many factors such as supply & demand, global demand recovery, and more recently geopolitical concerns. At current prices the risk to demand destruction and stagflation is high, which means we remain cautious of oil in the med-term. Reason for caution: Synchronised policy tightening targeting demand, slowing growth, consensus longs, steep backwardation curve, heightened implied volatility. We remain cautious oil, but geopolitics are a key driver and focus for Petro-currencies like the CAD (even though the CAD-Oil correlation has been hit and miss).
3. Global Risk Outlook
As a high-beta currency, the CAD usually benefits from overall positive risk sentiment as well as environments that benefit pro-cyclical assets. Thus, both short-term (immediate) and med-term (underlying) risk sentiment will always be a key consideration for the CAD.
4. CFTC Analysis
Positioning was more mixed last week for the CAD, but we continue to think that markets are setting up a similar path compared to April 2021, Oct 2021 and Jan 2022 where markets were too aggressive to price in CAD upside only to see majority of it unwind later. As always though, timing those shorts will be very important.
5. The Week Ahead
For the Canadian Dollar the main focus in the week ahead will be employment data on Friday as well as ongoing developments in energy markets. Starting with oil prices, we know that the common correlation between Oil and the CAD has not been statistically significant over various lookback periods. However, that doesn’t mean we can ignore what is happening in commodity markets where Oil has seen further appreciation in recent sessions. As long as oil prices remain elevated, we would expect that to provide support for the CAD, but we need to keep the correlations in mind and understand that it has not been a key driver for the Petro-currency in recent weeks. As for the employment data, the biggest reaction will come from a miss as opposed to a beat. Why do we say that? Well, considering that markets have already priced in an aggressive policy path, and given the fact that the CAD is trading at 9-year highs, a beat won’t really chance much. However, a surprise miss, that pours some cold water on the BoC’s overly optimistic outlook for the economy could provide some decent downside in the CAD if the miss is big enough of course. Our preferred way to trade the CAD is still with pairs like AUDCAD and EURCAD, and with both of these two currencies having policy decisions we want to pay close attention to them this week.