CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

Canadian Dollar Post-BOC Rate Cut: USD/CAD Pushes Tepid Initial Breakout

Article By: ,  Sr. Strategist

 

Canadian Dollar, USD/CAD Talking Points:

  • The Bank of Canada cut rates by 50 basis points at this morning’s meeting but given the reaction in USD/CAD that move was already priced-in ahead of time.
  • Interestingly as the USD has rallied aggressively against most major currencies over the past few days, USD/CAD is holding the same resistance that was in-play on Monday, explored further below.

The global rate cut bonanza continued this morning with the Bank of Canada’s 50 bp move. This came with little surprise as the initial reaction in the major of USD/CAD was muted, with a grinding move around resistance of 1.3846. Perhaps more interesting is the deduction that USD/CAD had held around that resistance while USD has shown major breaks elsewhere, with EUR/USD and USD/JPY both putting in significant extension of trends in each respective pair.

In the early aftermath of the release, bulls are starting to show a greater push but the big question at this point is whether it’ll be enough to allow a significant breakout to the next resistance level up, around the 1.3900 handle.

 

USD/CAD Hourly Price Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/CAD on Tradingview

 

USD/CAD The Next 150 Pips Above

 

Given the natural cross-border trade between the US and Canada, there are a number of shared relationships to consider. There’s of course those that are doing business in both the US and Canada, from which a bit of natural speculation occurs. When the CAD is seen as cheap and the USD expensive, this can impact behavior and the opposite can be true when CAD is perceived as expensive and the USD less so. This is one of the reasons that the pair has built into a range over the past nine years with prices largely holding between 1.2000 and 1.4000 with the notable exception of the pandemic backdrop when the pair spent a couple months above the 1.4000 handle.

 

USD/CAD Monthly Price Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/CAD on Tradingview

 

But on a shorter-term basis it’s the 1.4000 level that’s seemed well-defended, with last year’s swing high showing six pipettes below the 1.3900 handle and the swing-high from the year before showing up just inside of 1.3950. This year, when panic was peaking in early-August and VIX spiked to it’s third highest level ever, price put in a temporary but brief break of 1.3900 to hold just below the 1.3950 level.

This isn’t to say that a 1.4000 break is impossible but given the backdrop its notable to consider that some large speculators and producers and businesses can look to take advantage of what’s perceived as a cheap Canadian Dollar should 1.3950 or 1.4000 come into play, and perhaps even to a lesser degree around the 1.3900 level.

This would also seem to solidify the rationale for why the move has stalled around the 1.3850 level that’s being tested right now, even as the USD has shown significant strength against most other major currencies in the past couple days.

 

USD/CAD Weekly Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/CAD on Tradingview

 

USD Near-Term Strategy

 

Despite the resistance potential that sits overhead, price action is objectively bullish at this point given the continued higher-highs and higher-lows that have printed; so we can’t quite say that it’s bearish from that perspective at this point with a fresh two-month-high showing up this morning.

If we do see a reprieve in the USD, which remains overbought as of this writing, that can begin to change but before sellers look to push bearish trends, they would likely want to wait for a violation of support to substantiate that strategy. The price of 1.3815 seems notable in that regards, as this was the support taken from prior resistance that held the lows ahead of the rate decision. Below that, there are Fibonacci supports at 1.3788 and 1.3769, after which the 1.3748 level comes into the picture and that’s another prior action support that’s confluent with a psychological level (1.3750).

 

USD/CAD Four-Hour Price Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley, USD/CAD on Tradingview

 

--- written by James Stanley, Senior Strategist

 

 

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