Canadian Dollar pressured by renewed US Dollar strength despite elevated Oil prices

  • USD/CAD trades near one-month highs, while the US Dollar Index advances to its strongest level in two weeks.
  • Stronger US inflation and Retail Sales data boost expectations for a possible Fed rate hike by year-end.
  • Higher Crude Oil prices linked to Middle East supply concerns are helping support the Canadian Dollar, limiting broader gains in USD/CAD.

USD/CAD extends gains on Thursday, rising for a third consecutive day, supported by renewed demand for the US Dollar (USD) as traders assess ongoing geopolitical developments alongside the latest US economic data, which reinforced expectations of a more hawkish Federal Reserve (Fed) stance.

At the time of writing, the pair is up 0.14% on the day, trading around 1.3726, close to one-month highs. However, elevated Oil prices linked to supply disruptions in the Middle East continue to provide underlying support to the commodity-linked Canadian Dollar (CAD), limiting stronger upside moves in USD/CAD.

Investors are closely monitoring the two-day summit in Beijing between US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, where both leaders discussed trade, increasing bilateral investment and the ongoing Iran war. Trump told Fox News earlier on Thursday that Xi Jinping offered to help on Iran and said he wants to see the Strait of Hormuz reopened.

Meanwhile, US-Iran peace talks remain deadlocked, with no near-term breakthrough in sight as both sides continue to disagree over Tehran’s nuclear program.

On the data front, US Retail Sales rose 0.5% MoM in April, matching market expectations but slowing sharply from March’s 1.6% increase. The Retail Sales Control Group, which feeds directly into Gross Domestic Product (GDP) calculations, also increased 0.5% in April after rising 0.8% previously.

The data follows hotter-than-expected US CPI and PPI reports earlier this week, which showed inflation accelerated sharply in April, largely driven by higher energy prices.

Traders have dialed up bets that the Fed could deliver an interest rate hike by year-end following the latest batch of US economic data. According to the CME FedWatch Tool, markets are currently pricing in a roughly 42% probability of a rate hike at the December meeting, up from around 33% a day earlier.

Growing expectations of a more hawkish Fed have pushed US Treasury yields sharply higher in recent days while also boosting demand for the US Dollar. Ongoing tensions in the Middle East are providing additional support to the Greenback through safe-haven flows.

The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the Greenback’s value against a basket of six major currencies, is trading around 98.73, its highest level in two weeks.

Euro slides as resilient US sales fuel Dollar rally

EUR/USD edges lower for the third consecutive day during the North American session, down 0.22%, as US economic data showed consumers' resilience. In contrast, jobless benefits data showed a slight increase in the number of Americans filing for jobless benefits.
Read more Previous

BoE’s Pill: Cannot say now if rate rise would only be temporary

Bank of England (BoE) MPC member, Huw Pill, said that he does not expect second-round effects to be as strong as in 2022, and also that the second-round effects are behavioral, affected by what the BoE does next. He spoke at an event hosted by NatWest on Thursday.
Read more Next