Confirming you are not from the U.S. or the Philippines

By giving this statement, I explicitly declare and confirm that:
  • I am not a U.S. citizen or resident
  • I am not a resident of the Philippines
  • I do not directly or indirectly own more than 10% of shares/voting rights/interest of the U.S. residents and/or do not control U.S. citizens or residents by other means
  • I am not under the direct or indirect ownership of more than 10% of shares/voting rights/interest and/or under the control of U.S. citizen or resident exercised by other means
  • I am not affiliated with U.S. citizens or residents in terms of Section 1504(a) of FATCA
  • I am aware of my liability for making a false declaration.
For the purposes of this statement, all U.S. dependent countries and territories are equalled to the main territory of the USA. I accept full responsibility for the accuracy of this declaration and commit to personally address and resolve any claims or issues that may arise from a breach of this statement.
We are dedicated to your privacy and the security of your personal information. We only collect emails to provide special offers and important information about our products and services. By submitting your email address, you agree to receive such letters from us. If you want to unsubscribe or have any questions or concerns, write to our Customer Support.
Octa trading broker
Open trading account
Back

USD/CAD Price Analysis: At make or a break below 1.3400

  • USD/CAD consolidates below 1.3400 as investors await the US Inflation data.
  • Bets in favour of rate cuts from the Fed in March may deepen if the US CPI report turns out sticky.
  • USD/CAD reflects a volatility contraction pattern formation.

The USD/CAD pair falls slightly to near 1.370 after failing to sustain above the round-level resistance of 1.3400. The Loonie asset demonstrates a sheer consolidation as investors shift focus towards the United States inflation data for December, which will be published on Thursday.

S&P500 futures struggle to hold gains as market mood remains cautious. The US Dollar Index (DXY) drops to near 102.44 despite persistent uncertainty over rate cuts by the Federal Reserve (Fed). 10-year US Treasury yields have slipped slightly below 4.0%.

Investors will keenly watch the US inflation data as it will provide fresh cues about likely rate cuts by the Federal reserve (Fed) in March. According to the estimates, the headline inflation rose by 0.2% against 0.1% growth in November. The annual headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) grew by 3.2% from 3.1% increase a month ago.

Meanwhile, core inflation grew steadily on a monthly basis. The annual core CPI data decelerated to 3.8% against the former reading of 4.0%.

USD/CAD struggles for a direction amid formation of a volatility contraction pattern on an hourly scale near 1.3400. A sharp decline in volatility indicates indecisiveness among market participants amid absence of a potential trigger. Horizontal resistance plotted from December 15 high around 1.3405 continues to act as barricade for US Dollar bulls.

The 50-period Exponential Moving Average (EMA) around 1.3380 continues to provide support to the US Dollar.

The Relative Strength Index (RSI) (14) oscillates in a 40.00-60.00 range, which indicates a consolidation ahead.

Fresh upside would appear if the Loonie asset breaks above January 9 high of 1.3415. This would open upside towards December 3 low at 1.3480, followed by December 5 low at 1.3540.

On the flip side, a downside move below January 5 low at 1.3288 would expose the asset to December 22 low at 1.3220. Breach of the latter would build more pressure on the asset and will drag it towards December 27 low at 1.3177.

USD/CAD hourly chart

 

USD/CAD: Corrective potential may extend to the 1.3450/1.3550 range – Scotiabank

USD/CAD edges slightly lower after 1.34+ rebuff. Economists at Scotiabank analyze the pair’s outlook.
Read more Previous

EUR/USD: Short-term patterns lean somewhat bearish – Scotiabank

EUR/USD edges higher but consolidation range trade persists, economists at Scotiabank report.
Read more Next