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Abstract:By Fergal Smith TORONTO (Reuters) – The Canadian dollar will claw back its recent decline over the coming year, as elevated oil prices bolster Canadas trade surplus and the central bank potentially hikes interest rates just as much as the U.S. Federal Reserve, a Reuters poll
div classBodysc17zpet90 cdBBJodivpBy Fergal Smithp
pTORONTO Reuters – The Canadian dollar will claw back its recent decline over the coming year, as elevated oil prices bolster Canadas trade surplus and the central bank potentially hikes interest rates just as much as the U.S. Federal Reserve, a Reuters poll showed.pdivdivdiv classBodysc17zpet90 cdBBJodiv
pThe loonie has lost ground since it touched 1.24 per U.S. dollar, or 80.65 U.S. cents, in April. This has occurred as the safehaven greenback has been supported against major currencies by bets that the Federal Reserve would raise interest rates aggressively to tame inflation. p
pOn Wednesday, the Fed hiked by half a percentage point, its biggest single move in 22 years.p
pStill, the Canadian dollar has fared better than most other G10 currencies in 2022, shielded by domestic economic strength, including a string of monthly trade surpluses. Data on Wednesday showed Canadian exports climbing to a record high in March.p
p“With the price of oil where it is, Canadas trade surplus should continue to provide good support for the loonie,” said Greg Anderson, global head of foreign exchange strategy at BMO Capital Markets in New York.p
p“The more that the market accepts that oil north of 100 a barrel is not a spike phenomenon but is something that is longer lasting, the more that well see some of those petrogreenbacks converted into Canadian dollars.”p
pCanada is a major producer of oil, which has climbed more than 40 this year as Western sanctions on Russia have disrupted supplies.p
pThe median forecast in the poll was for the Canadian dollar to strengthen 1.3 to 1.2568 per U.S. dollar in three months‘ time, compared with a forecast of 1.25 in last month’s poll. Over the coming year, it will climb to 1.23 per dollar, according to the latest poll.p
pThe Bank of Canada raised interest rates by a half a percentage point on April 13. Investors are expecting several more such moves, lifting the benchmark rate to 2.50, the middle of the central banks socalled neutral range, by September.p
pA neutral interest rate is the level that a central bank estimates will neither boost nor restrain economic activity.p
pThe BoC is one of the most hawkish of the major central banks, “maybe more so than the Fed,” said Erik Nelson, a currency strategist at Wells Fargo.p
pA combination of a hawkish central bank and high oil prices “to me signals Canadian dollar resilience,” Nelson said.p
p
pp Reporting by Fergal Smith Polling by Anant Chandak and Sarupya Ganguly in Bengaluru Editing by Bradley Perrettp
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