* Canadian dollar at C$1.2300, or 81.30 U.S. cents
* Loonie touches its strongest since Sept. 20 at C$1.2250
* Currency rises 2.3 percent in January
* 2-year yield touches its highest in 6-1/2 years
By Fergal Smith
TORONTO, Jan 31 (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar rose to a four-month high against its U.S. counterpart on Wednesday, boosted by data showing strong growth in Canada's economy, but some gains were pared as investors weighed the U.S. Federal Reserve interest rate decision.
At 4 p.m. (2100 GMT), the Canadian dollar CAD=D4 was trading 0.3 percent higher at C$1.2300 to the greenback, or 81.30 U.S. cents.
The currency touched its strongest level since Sept. 20 at C$1.2250. For the month, the loonie rose 2.3 percent.
Canadian gross domestic product rose by 0.4 percent in November from October, Statistics Canada said. The increase was in line with economists' expectations and the biggest gain since May 2017. loonie will go as the big dollar (U.S. dollar) goes, unless we see not just strong Canadian data but Herculean Canadian data," said Brad Schruder, director of corporate sales and structuring at BMO Capital Markets. "The market doesn't believe it (the data) is enough to move the needle for the Bank of Canada."
Chances of a rate hike at the central bank's next meeting in March were little changed after the data at about 25 percent, the overnight index swaps market indicated. BOCWATCH
The central bank has raised interest rates three times since July. Its benchmark rate sits at 1 percent.
The U.S. dollar .DXY rebounded against a basket of major currencies after the Fed kept interest rates unchanged but said it anticipated inflation would rise this year, a sign it is still on track to raise borrowing costs in March. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he did not think U.S. President Donald Trump would pull out of the North American Free Trade Agreement, despite slow progress at negotiations to update the $1.2 trillion trade pact. sends about 75 percent of its exports to the United States.
U.S. crude CLc1 prices settled 0.4 percent higher at C$64.73 a barrel. Oil is one of Canada's major exports.
Canadian government bond prices were mixed across a flatter yield curve, with the two-year CA2YT=RR down 1.5 Canadian cents to yield 1.839 percent and the 10-year CA10YT=RR rising 4 Canadian cents to yield 2.289 percent.
The two-year yield touched its highest point since June 2011 at 1.849 percent.
<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Graphic - Canada monthly GDP, exports to the U.S.
http://link.reuters.com/jev87s Graphic - Canada economic snapshot
http://tmsnrt.rs/2e8hNWV
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