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CDN$ Decouples from Oil prices

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    CDN$ Decouples from Oil prices

    CDN $ .775 this afternoon....



    Canadian dollar decouples from oil, adding to BoC inflation headaches
    By Fergal Smith 11 hrs ago

    By Fergal Smith

    TORONTO (Reuters) - As the Russia-Ukraine crisis propels crude oil to its highest level in 14 years, the historic link between the Canadian dollar and energy prices has weakened, leaving the Bank of Canada with one less tool to fight inflation.

    The normal tight relationship between the Canadian dollar and oil has typically meant the central bank could rely on a stronger currency to ease inflation pressures brought on by higher energy prices. Gains for the loonie would reduce the cost of Canada's imports.

    But not so in the current cycle, with the crisis also hurting the outlook for the global economy, a negative for risk-sensitive currencies like the loonie, and driving demand for the safe-haven U.S. dollar.

    "There is a kink in the CAD-oil relationship," said Eric Theoret, global macro strategist at Manulife Investment Management. "You are not getting the currency strength that would dampen inflation."

    The last time oil was above $100 a barrel, in 2014, the Canadian dollar was at 1.09 per U.S. dollar, or nearly 92 U.S. cents. It is currently at about 1.28.

    Graphic: Canadian dollar decouples from oil: https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/lgpdwaarwvo/Canadian%20dollar%20decouples%20from%20oil.png

    Meanwhile, the 3-month rolling correlation between the Canadian dollar and oil has fallen to 0.3 from 0.9 in December, according to Refinitiv Eikon data, moving closer to the zero threshold that would indicate no connection.

    "What we've seen over the last month or two has definitely been a quite significant outlier in what has been historically a very steady and pretty consistent relationship," said Shaun Osborne, chief currency strategist at Scotiabank.

    "We would probably be in a situation here where the Bank (of Canada) would not be pushing back against the idea of a stronger Canadian dollar."

    Canada's central bank has pledged to tame inflation, which reached a 30-year high of 5.1% in January. Last Wednesday, it raised its key interest rate for the first time in three years and made clear more hikes are on the way.

    Inflation could move even higher over the coming months due to surging commodity prices, economists say.

    Higher energy prices will ultimately benefit the loonie over the coming year, say strategists in a Reuters poll, but due to an improvement in Canada's terms of trade, or the ratio of its export prices to import prices, rather than an expected increase in investment.

    Canadian companies are wary of spending aggressively to grow oil production after the pain of 2020's pandemic-induced oil price collapse. Investors are demanding strict capital discipline, while environmental opposition to new fossil fuel projects and the Canadian government's plans to cap carbon emissions are also deterring growth.

    "The era of 'drill, baby drill' is over in America and it's the same kind of discipline in Canada," said Adam Button, chief currency analyst at ForexLive, referring to a political slogan of the U.S. Republican Party.

    "Oil isn't the driver (of the Canadian dollar) it once was," Button said.

    (Reporting by Fergal Smith; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)"

    PM Trudeau is laughed at in the EU, as he totally fails to answer questions about the CDN Freedom Convoy.
    How sick... had we been sensitive to the reasonable call for CDN Charter freedoms... we would have been champions instead of laughing stocks internationally.

    #2
    Originally posted by TOM4CWB View Post
    CDN $ .775 this afternoon....



    Canadian dollar decouples from oil, adding to BoC inflation headaches
    By Fergal Smith 11 hrs ago

    By Fergal Smith

    TORONTO (Reuters) - As the Russia-Ukraine crisis propels crude oil to its highest level in 14 years, the historic link between the Canadian dollar and energy prices has weakened, leaving the Bank of Canada with one less tool to fight inflation.

    The normal tight relationship between the Canadian dollar and oil has typically meant the central bank could rely on a stronger currency to ease inflation pressures brought on by higher energy prices. Gains for the loonie would reduce the cost of Canada's imports.

    But not so in the current cycle, with the crisis also hurting the outlook for the global economy, a negative for risk-sensitive currencies like the loonie, and driving demand for the safe-haven U.S. dollar.

    "There is a kink in the CAD-oil relationship," said Eric Theoret, global macro strategist at Manulife Investment Management. "You are not getting the currency strength that would dampen inflation."

    The last time oil was above $100 a barrel, in 2014, the Canadian dollar was at 1.09 per U.S. dollar, or nearly 92 U.S. cents. It is currently at about 1.28.

    Graphic: Canadian dollar decouples from oil: https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/lgpdwaarwvo/Canadian%20dollar%20decouples%20from%20oil.png

    Meanwhile, the 3-month rolling correlation between the Canadian dollar and oil has fallen to 0.3 from 0.9 in December, according to Refinitiv Eikon data, moving closer to the zero threshold that would indicate no connection.

    "What we've seen over the last month or two has definitely been a quite significant outlier in what has been historically a very steady and pretty consistent relationship," said Shaun Osborne, chief currency strategist at Scotiabank.

    "We would probably be in a situation here where the Bank (of Canada) would not be pushing back against the idea of a stronger Canadian dollar."

    Canada's central bank has pledged to tame inflation, which reached a 30-year high of 5.1% in January. Last Wednesday, it raised its key interest rate for the first time in three years and made clear more hikes are on the way.

    Inflation could move even higher over the coming months due to surging commodity prices, economists say.

    Higher energy prices will ultimately benefit the loonie over the coming year, say strategists in a Reuters poll, but due to an improvement in Canada's terms of trade, or the ratio of its export prices to import prices, rather than an expected increase in investment.

    Canadian companies are wary of spending aggressively to grow oil production after the pain of 2020's pandemic-induced oil price collapse. Investors are demanding strict capital discipline, while environmental opposition to new fossil fuel projects and the Canadian government's plans to cap carbon emissions are also deterring growth.

    "The era of 'drill, baby drill' is over in America and it's the same kind of discipline in Canada," said Adam Button, chief currency analyst at ForexLive, referring to a political slogan of the U.S. Republican Party.

    "Oil isn't the driver (of the Canadian dollar) it once was," Button said.

    (Reporting by Fergal Smith; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)"

    PM Trudeau is laughed at in the EU, as he totally fails to answer questions about the CDN Freedom Convoy.
    How sick... had we been sensitive to the reasonable call for CDN Charter freedoms... we would have been champions instead of laughing stocks internationally.


    Chart of CDN$ Oil price

    Comment


      #3
      Our allies could be getting their required energy supply from Canada at a reasonable price if Canada hadn't let the current wing nuts into power.


      Probably wouldn't have to be talking about the Russia / Ukraine war as Russia wouldn't be as wealthy as the allies have made them .

      Not much sense to depend on Russia for your energy requirements then go crying to allies to to help out when shit hits the fan.

      Comment


        #4
        the world sees exactly how unsafe an investment in anything canadian it has become under jusnit's liberals.
        jusnit had bank accounts frozen with no laws passed. would any of you invest in a country like that?

        Comment


          #5
          The idiots in charge of the B of C will have to get serious about raising rates to defend the dollar. Locally it seems that the county can't afford to fuel the snow plows after yesterday's blow in which moved all 8 inches of new snow we got last week from the field to the road and yard. Cleaned all the snow out of last years short stubble.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by ajl View Post
            The idiots in charge of the B of C will have to get serious about raising rates to defend the dollar. Locally it seems that the county can't afford to fuel the snow plows after yesterday's blow in which moved all 8 inches of new snow we got last week from the field to the road and yard. Cleaned all the snow out of last years short stubble.
            Tell your county to save their money, and let the sun take care of it in a few days. Or do you have grader operators that can't put a crown on your road.

            I'd wonder when WTI oil decouples from Brent oil.

            Comment


              #7

              This is a street on the north side of town
              6” Sunday night
              4” last night with a 50 mph wind , most east west roads were plugged
              Graders have been goin here 7 days a week all winter
              using the cat in the heavy spots

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by checking View Post
                Tell your county to save their money, and let the sun take care of it in a few days. Or do you have grader operators that can't put a crown on your road.

                I'd wonder when WTI oil decouples from Brent oil.
                Do you understand how much snow there is in some areas ?
                I had a 500hp tractor with big heavy Leon blade .
                I had to take a few runs at spots on a main grid to open it up this morning. It will take more than a few days of sun .

                Comment


                  #9
                  Put a V plow on a twin sc****r and 12 yd gravel in the bucket and you can open roads all day long at 18 MPH.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Just got back from Mexico this morning, haven’t seen this much snow for decades. RM has ridged every road around here, had it not these roads wouldn’t be passable anymore. In hindsight I should of stayed n Mexico at least 2 more weeks. Sounds like checking hasn’t been around much snow in the past, we could easily have a other 6 weeks of winter before snow starts to melt.

                    Back to the topic, BOC should of raised their interest rate by at least half a point but chose not to resulting in loss of confidence in the CAD. Inflation will continue to be a problem until the government gets serious about interest rates, the longer we wait to address this problem the worse the pain will be.
                    Last edited by Sodbuster; Mar 9, 2022, 08:27.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Big shrink by mid March.

                      Snow will be a distant memory.

                      Kills me to see a grader moving at 3 mph dribbling snow to road edge with it's blade 4" off the top of the road because the operator has been told not to throw the late fall applied gravel into the ditch. Then bringing out blower to cut the ditch edge bank back 4' only to have wind fill the cut back in overnight, and plug the road

                      Rinse, repeat.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Checking , “ mid-March” ? That’s five days away. 14-9

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by checking View Post
                          Big shrink by mid March.

                          Snow will be a distant memory.

                          Kills me to see a grader moving at 3 mph dribbling snow to road edge with it's blade 4" off the top of the road because the operator has been told not to throw the late fall applied gravel into the ditch. Then bringing out blower to cut the ditch edge bank back 4' only to have wind fill the cut back in overnight, and plug the road

                          Rinse, repeat.
                          Snow in areas here and north won’t be a distant memory till after Mid April

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by checking View Post
                            Big shrink by mid March.

                            Snow will be a distant memory.

                            Kills me to see a grader moving at 3 mph dribbling snow to road edge with it's blade 4" off the top of the road because the operator has been told not to throw the late fall applied gravel into the ditch. Then bringing out blower to cut the ditch edge bank back 4' only to have wind fill the cut back in overnight, and plug the road

                            Rinse, repeat.
                            Common problem leaving gravel windrows on the edge of road in fall. Gravel ends up in ditch. Never learn it should be leveled in fall. Excavators opening drains to prevent flooding this spring.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by Retired View Post
                              Put a V plow on a twin sc****r and 12 yd gravel in the bucket and you can open roads all day long at 18 MPH.
                              yea that would make the roads into fantastic snow traps when there is 4 ft of powder and wind blows every day
                              you sure wouldn't get through the second time

                              Comment

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