Canadian Dollar Pares Losses On Friday Despite Downturn In Canadian Retail Sales


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  • The Canadian dollar recovers lost ground, but it remains down for the week.
  • Canada Retail Sales decline further, limiting the recovery of the Canadian dollar.
  • Broad market risk appetite recovers after US inflation expectations ease.
  • The Canadian dollar recovered ground on Friday, sparked by a shift in investor risk appetite. US Durable Goods Orders data snubbed an expected decline, and Consumer five-year Inflation Expectations in May eased slightly.Canada saw a fresh downturn in Retail Sales in March after median forecasts expected a slight bounce. Despite further signs of economic weakness in Canada, broader market sentiment gained ground and forced the US dollar lower after the Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index climbed higher than expected in May.

    Market Movers: Market Sentiment Rebounds, Canadian Dollar Shrugs Off Canadian Data Miss

  • Canadian Retail Sales slid -0.2% month-over-month in March, missing the forecasted recovery to 0.0% from the previous month’s -0.1%.Canadian Retail Sales excluding Automobiles tumbled to a nine-month low of -0.6% month-over-month, entirely missing the forecast of 0.1%, though the previous month’s figure was revised upward slightly to -0.2% from -0.3%.
  • US Durable Goods Orders in April rose 0.7%, shrugging off the -0.8% forecast, though the previous month’s print was steeply revised lower to 0.8% from 2.6%.
  • The University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment Index printed firmly higher at 69.1 compared to the previous month’s 67.4. Median market forecasts had expected a slight uptick to 67.5.
  • The UoM five-year Consumer Inflation Expectations in May eased to 3.0% versus the expected hold at 3.1%.
  • Market sentiment is recovering on Friday after a mid-week spike in risk aversion sparked by a harsh rebalancing of investor rate cut expectations. The CME’s FedWatch Tool shows that rate markets are pricing in nearly-even odds of a rate cut from the Federal Reserve in September, down sharply from 70% at the beginning of the week.
  • Price of the Canadian Dollar This Week
    The table below shows the percentage change of the Canadian dollar against other major currencies this week. The Canadian dollar was the strongest against the Australian dollar.

    Technical Analysis: Canadian Dollar Pulls Back from Bearish Edge but Is Still Broadly Lower for the Week
    The Canadian dollar pared some of the week’s losses on Friday, but it still remains firmly lower against most of its major currency peers compared to Monday’s opening bids. The Canadian dollar extended gains to two-thirds of a percent against the Australian dollar this week, while holding a third of a percent higher against the Japanese yen through the week.Despite a firm Friday rebound, the Canadian dollar remains down four-tenths of one percent against the greenback as the US dollar remains one of the week’s strongest performers. The USD/CAD currency pair pulled back to 1.3670 during Friday’s US market session, dipping from the week’s highs near 1.3745. However, the pair still remains higher on the week, trading on the high side of a technical bounce from the 1.3600 handle.Choppy chart conditions have held the USD/CAD cross near the 200-hour Exponential Moving Average (EMA) near 1.3668. Further bearish momentum will find a firm price floor at the 200-day EMA at 1.3553.

    USD/CAD Hourly Chart


    USD/CAD Daily Chart
     More By This Author:EUR/USD Slips Further Back On Thursday As Rate Cut Hopes Dry Up EUR/USD Eased Lower On Wednesday After FOMC Meeting Minutes Miss The Mark EUR/USD Eased From 1.0880 On Monday As Looming Rate Differential Weighs

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