Analysis

Loonie rejects 2-Day peak ahead of data

USDCAD, H4 and Daily

The Greenback has also posted gains against most other currencies, most notably the Turkish Lira, which has tumbled to fresh record lows. The Dollar’s ascent has been concomitant with a bout of risk aversion on investor concerns about an escalating trade war, and the impact of US sanctions on Turkey and Iran.

Amid broad rally in the Greenback, USDCAD has lifted for a 2nd day, but also following a sharp retreat in oil prices, which provides a bearish lead for the Canadian Dollar. The pair is trading in the upper Bollinger Bands pattern, while it manage to extend gains up to 1.3121 above the 50-day SMA, at 1.3115. In the last hourly session, the pair moves southwards, rejecting the latest swing high and the Resistance area at 1.3123-1.3126, which comes between the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement level since 1.3385 peak on July 27 and the 200-period SMA in the 4-hour chart.

Hence the pair still holds a daily Resistance at the significant 1.3100 level. A Closing today above this level along with the positive daily momentum indicators, would suggest further move to the upside and a possible retest of the 50.0 Fib. level, around 1.3170 level.  RSI just crossed 50 level, while MACD oscillator decreases above its signal line within the negative area, suggesting decline of the negative momentum. Daily Support comes at the confluence of 50-day EMA and the day’s open price at 1.3042.

Intraday, the pair is currently moving below R2, hence next Support holds at R1 lat 1.3075. Further losses below 23.6 Fibonacci retracement could suggest swing further to the downside at the 1.3008-10.

Focus will now turned to Canada releases the July employment report today, which it is widely expect to come at a 15.0k headline gain following the 31.8k gain in June. The unemployment rate is seen slipping to 5.9% after perking up to 6.0% in June from the 40-year low 5.8% in May. Total average hourly earnings are seen rising at a 3.7% y/y rate in July from the 3.6% clip in June, but still short of the 3.9% growth rate of May.

On the NAFTA front, both Canadian and Mexican officials have this week been expressing cautious optimism. Canada’s ambassador to the US MacNaughton said yesterday that the US and Mexico are getting close on NAFTA auto issues, but that the sunset clause is a sticking point for Canada, and that to get a deal everyone must show flexibility.

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