The Canadian dollar has edged lower in the Wednesday session, after recording strong gains on Tuesday. Currently, USD/CAD is trading at 1.2837, up 0.24% on the day. There are no Canadian indicators on the schedule. In the US, ADP Nonfarm Payrolls climbed to 241 thousand, crushing the estimate of 208 thousand. Later in the day, we’ll also get a look at ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI, which is forecast to drop to 59.0 points. On Thursday, the US releases unemployment claims and Canada will publish Trade Balance.
The tariff spat between China and the US continues, and the growing possibility of a global trade war could be devastating for the Canadian economy, which is heavily reliant on exports. The Chinese government has fired the latest salvo, announcing 25% tariffs on 106 American products, including soy beans, wheat and some motor vehicles. The value of these US exports amounts to some $50 billion – the same value as Chinese exports which have been slapped with tariffs by President Trump. This represents a significant raising of the stakes, and has the markets worried. China’s deputy finance minister has said that a trade war between the two sides would be a ‘lose-lose’, and few investors would disagree with his diagnosis. However, neither Trump nor Chinese President Xi Jinping has blinked so far, and the crisis shows no signs of being resolved anytime soon. As one US analyst wrote this week, “trade wars are easy to start but hard to stop.”
After months of arduous negotiations, is a NAFTA agreement within reach? US President Trump has been pushing hard for a renegotiated NAFTA, and had threatened to walk away from the talks if his demands were not met. There are some outstanding issues still on the table, such as the US demand that all NAFTA-produced cars contain at least 50% US content and Trump’s demand that Mexico pay for a wall on its border with the US. Still, negotiators have sounded cautiously optimistic, and a report earlier this week said that the US was pressing for an announcement of agreement-in-principle at next week’s Summit of the Americas in Peru. The Canadian dollar has been under pressure over lingering uncertainty with regard to NAFTA, and a new deal could boost the Canadian currency.
U.S at War: China Retaliates to Trumps Tariffs
USD/CAD Fundamentals
Wednesday (April 4)
- 8:15 US ADP Nonfarm Employment Change. Estimate 208K. Actual 241K
- 9:45 US Final Services PMI. Estimate 54.3
- 10:00 US ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI. Estimate 59.0
- 10:00 US Factory Orders. Estimate 1.7%
- 10:30 US Crude Oil Inventories. Estimate 1.4M
- 11:00 US FOMC Member Loretta Mester Speaks
Thursday (April 5)
- 8:30 Canadian Trade Balance. Estimate -2.1B
- 8:30 US Unemployment Claims. Estimate 225K
*All release times are GMT
*Key events are in bold
USD/CAD for Wednesday, April 4, 2018
USD/CAD, April 4 at 8:20 EST
Open: 1.2806 High: 1.2843 Low: 1.2775 Close: 1.2837
USD/CAD Technical
S3 | S2 | S1 | R1 | R2 | R3 |
1.2590 | 1.2687 | 1.2757 | 1.2850 | 1.2930 | 1.3050 |
USD/CAD edged lower in the Asian session and has rebounded in European trade and posted gains
- 1.2757 remains a weak support
- 1.2850 is a weak resistance line
- Current range: 1.2757 to 1.2850
Further levels in both directions:
- Below: 1.2757, 1.2687 and 1.2590
- Above: 1.2850, 1.2930, 1.3050 and 1.3165
OANDA’s Open Positions Ratio
USD/CAD ratio is unchanged this week. In the Wednesday session, short positions have a majority (54%), indicative of USD/CAD reversing directions and moving lower.
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