The Canadian dollar steadied against its U.S. counterpart on Wednesday, with the currency unable to sustain a move out of its ...
The Canadian dollar was slightly firmer Thursday morning, edging above the 70 U.S. cent mark. At 8:36 a.m. CST the Canadian dollar was trading at US$0.7001 or US$1=C$1.4284 which compares with ...
BMO expects the Bank of Canada to accelerate its interest rate cuts and bring the rate down to 1.5% from the current 3% to support growth. This could further pull down the Canadian dollar.
The Canadian dollar edged up to a two-month high against its U.S. counterpart on Friday as investors grew skeptical that the ...
USD/CAD posts modest gains around 1.4340 in Wednesday’s early Asian session. Trump threatened 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada on February 1, weighing on the CAD. Canadian headline CPI rose ...
The Canadian dollar weakened against the greenback on Monday, and the yield on benchmark government debt slipped. The loonie ...
Canadian dollar loses 0.3% against the greenback ... he was thinking about imposing a 25% tariff on goods from Canada on Feb. 1. "Today's market activity doesn't appear to be tariff-driven ...
But with the loonie plummeting to four ... Last year, it was reported that Canada’s Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne listed Aldi as one of the foreign grocers he intended to ...
The Canadian Dollar (CAD) remains buried within consolidation against the Greenback. The Loonie briefly fell to its lowest ...
The Canadian dollar strengthened against its U.S. counterpart on Friday, adding to its weekly gain, as stronger-than-expected domestic jobs data kept expectations in check for another Bank of Canada ...
adding the loonie was down in line with the Australian dollar and the euro. He said that suggests investors are seeing tariffs as “not just a Canada problem” but one with much broader reach.
Schamotta said the postponement lifted the Canadian dollar against the greenback by about ... cent,” although with bets rising for another Bank of Canada rate cut there could be a further 1.5 per cent ...