USD/CAD – Canadian Dollar in Holding Pattern Ahead of Canadian, US Job Reports

USD/CAD is unchanged in the Friday session. In North American trade, the pair is trading at the 1.35 line. On the release front, employment numbers will be on center stage on both sides of the border. The US will release three key indicators – Nonfarm Payrolls, Average Hourly Earnings and the unemployment rate. The Nonfarm payrolls report is expected to drop to 200 thousand, while wages are forecast to improve to 0.3%. Canada will publish Employment Change and the unemployment rate. The markets are expecting the economy to add a negligible 0.6 thousand jobs. Given the host of key events, traders should be prepared of volatility from USD/CAD during the North American session.

Canada’s labor market has improved in recent months. Job creation numbers were much higher than expected in the fourth quarter, and this positive trend has continued into 2017, as the economy added 48.3 thousand jobs in January. However, the impressive trend may peter out in February, with a forecast of only 0.6 thousand new jobs. The strong US economy, buoyed by a red-hot employment market, has been good news for Canada, which is heavily dependent on its southern neighbor. At the same time, speculation of an imminent rate hike by the Fed has boosted the US dollar, which has jumped 3.5% against the Canadian currency in 2017. On Thursday, USD/CAD pushed above the 1.35 line, which last occurred on at the end of December.

After raising rates in December, the Fed appears ready to make a March move. The odds of a March hike continue to climb, and are currently at 88% percent, according to the CME Group. Fed policymakers have been dropping hints of a March move, and a red-hot labor market and higher inflation levels present further arguments in favor of higher rates. Earlier in the year, the Fed had said that it wanted to wait until it had a clearer idea of President Trump’s economic policy before it tightened monetary policy. However, Trump has not backed up his promises to reform the tax code and increase fiscal spending with any details. Some Fed policymakers wanted to raise rates earlier this year, so Fed Chair Yellen is under pressure to make a move, and it appears virtually certain that the Fed will raise rates by a quarter-point on March 15.

Only a Woeful Jobs Report Should Derail Fed Hike

D-Day for NFP

 

USD/CAD Fundamentals

Friday (March 10)

  • 8:30 US Average Hourly Earnings. Estimate 0.3%
  • 8:30 US Nonfarm Employment Change. Estimate 185K
  • 8:30 US Unemployment Rate. Estimate 4.7%
  • 8:30 Canadian Employment Change. Estimate 0.6K
  • 8:30 Canadian Unemployment Rate. Estimate 6.8%

*All release times are GMT

*Key events are in bold

USD/CAD for Friday, March 10, 2017

USD/CAD March 10 at 7:40 EST

Open: 1.3488 High: 1.3534 Low: 1.3481 Close: 1.3505

USD/CAD Technical

S1 S2 S1 R1 R2 R3
1.3253 1.3371 1.3461 1.3551 1.3672 1.3784
  • USD/CAD was flat in the Asian session. The pair posted slight losses in European trade but has recovered
  • 1.3461 is providing support
  • 1.3551 is the next resistance line

Further levels in both directions:

  • Below: 1.3461, 1.3371, 1.3253 and 1.3120
  • Above: 1.3551, 1.3672 and 1.3784
  • Current range: 1.3461 to 1.3551

OANDA’s Open Positions Ratio

USD/CAD ratio is unchanged in the Friday session. Currently, long positions have a strong majority (69%), indicative of trader bias towards USD/CAD continuing to move higher.

This article is for general information purposes only. It is not investment advice or a solution to buy or sell securities. Opinions are the authors; not necessarily that of OANDA Corporation or any of its affiliates, subsidiaries, officers or directors. Leveraged trading is high risk and not suitable for all. You could lose all of your deposited funds.

Kenny Fisher

Kenny Fisher

Market Analyst at OANDA
A highly experienced financial market analyst with a focus on fundamental and macroeconomic analysis, Kenny Fisher’s daily commentary covers a broad range of markets including forex, equities and commodities. His work has been published in major online financial publications including Investing.com, Seeking Alpha and FXStreet. Kenny has been a MarketPulse contributor since 2012.
Kenny Fisher

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