Canadian Dollar Rises Amid Eased Global Tensions
Solid ECN – The Canadian dollar surged beyond 1.37 against the USD this April, bouncing back from its five-month nadir of 1.382 on April 16th. This improvement came as concerns about global risks eased with resolving tensions in the Middle East, and unimpressive US economic data weakened support for the US dollar.
In Canada, the prices of industrial products increased by 0.8% in March, aligning with forecasts and a slight dip from the prior month’s revised increase of 1.1%. Furthermore, new house prices in March held steady, defying expectations of a slight rise, with the annual change in the New Housing Price Index showing a decline of 0.4%. In the US, demand for the dollar as a safe-haven asset declined following assurances from Iran of no retaliatory strikes against Israel, coupled with a slowdown in the US manufacturing and services industries that heightened anticipation of interest rate reductions.
For further clues, the focus now shifts to upcoming US economic reports, including the GDP data on Thursday and the Federal Reserve’s PCE price index on Friday.