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Canadian Dollar gains on Friday's surging Oil prices

  • USD/CAD remains under pressure, heading for a second consecutive weekly loss.
  • Surging Crude Oil prices boost the commodity-linked Canadian Dollar.
  • Hawkish Federal Reserve expectations help limit the US Dollar's downside.

USD/CAD trades under pressure on Friday as the Canadian Dollar (CAD) benefits from higher Oil prices, offsetting the US Dollar’s (USD) recovery. At the time of writing, the pair trades around 1.4022, near a one-month low.

The pair is heading for a second consecutive weekly loss, with Oil prices up nearly 12% this week as intensifying fighting between the United States (US) and Iran disrupts energy shipments through the Strait of Hormuz. As Canada is a major Crude Oil exporter, higher prices tend to support the Loonie.

Higher energy prices are also reviving inflation concerns and complicating the monetary policy outlook for major central banks. Earlier this week, the Bank of Canada (BoC) left its policy rate unchanged at 2.25%, raised its 2026 inflation projection to 2.5% from 2.3%, and expects inflation to return to its 2% target by early 2027.

However, the BoC adopted a more balanced tone and removed the two-way policy guidance introduced in April. That guidance had suggested that new US trade restrictions on Canada could warrant interest rate cuts, while persistently high energy prices could require “consecutive increases in the policy rate.”

Across the border, softer-than-expected US inflation data released earlier this week initially pushed the US Dollar lower as traders trimmed bets on a near-term Federal Reserve (Fed) interest rate hike.

However, the Greenback's pullback proved short-lived as higher Oil prices fueled concerns that inflation could reaccelerate, supporting expectations of a Fed rate hike later this year.

Escalating geopolitical tensions and hawkish Fed expectations should keep the US Dollar well supported. The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the Greenback's value against a basket of six major currencies, trades around 100.83 after hitting a more than three-week low of 100.35 on Wednesday.

Economic Indicator

Consumer Price Index - Core (MoM)

The core Consumer Price Index, released by Statistics Canada on a monthly basis, represents changes in prices for Canadian consumers by comparing the cost of a fixed basket of goods and services. The core CPI excludes the more-volatile food and energy categories and it is considered a measure of underlying inflation. The MoM figure compares the prices of goods in the reference month to the previous month. Generally, a high reading is seen as bullish for the Canadian Dollar (CAD), while a low reading is seen as bearish.

Read more.

Next release: Mon Jul 20, 2026 12:30

Frequency: Monthly

Consensus: -

Previous: 0.2%

Source: Statistics Canada

Author

Vishal Chaturvedi

I am a macro-focused research analyst with over four years of experience covering forex and commodities market. I enjoy breaking down complex economic trends and turning them into clear, actionable insights that help traders stay ahead of the curve.

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