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Loonie sticks near 3-month high as stimulus measures weigh on greenback

Published 2020-06-04, 04:13 p/m
© Reuters.
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* Canadian dollar weakens 0.1% against the greenback

* Canada posts a trade deficit of C$3.25 billion in April

* Price of U.S. oil increases 0.3%

* Canada's 10-year yield rises 5.8 basis points to 0.675%

By Fergal Smith

TORONTO, June 4 (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar edged lower against its U.S. counterpart on Thursday as stocks fell and domestic data showed a plunge in exports, but global stimulus measures helped temper the decline, with the currency holding near an earlier three-month high.

The Canadian dollar CAD= was trading 0.1% lower at 1.3508 to the greenback, or 74.03 U.S. cents. The currency touched its strongest intraday level since March 9 at 1.3468.

"The CAD is holding near three-month highs largely because of broad, risk-on, USD sales that came in during the ECB's press conference this morning," said Erik Bregar, head of FX strategy at the Exchange Bank of Canada.

The safe-haven U.S. dollar .DXY fell against a basket of major currencies after a decision by the European Central Bank to ramp up an emergency asset-purchase program to shore up economies hurt by the coronavirus crisis bolstered the euro.

Canada's central bank has also launched an asset-purchase program. It sees reason to be optimistic about the country's economic recovery but is keeping a close eye on how COVID-19 is affecting growth and demand in its key export markets, Bank of Canada Deputy Governor Toni Gravelle said.

Canada posted a trade deficit of C$3.25 billion in April as exports fell by nearly 30% to the lowest level in more than 10 years at C$32.7 billion. Analysts had forecast exports would be C$42.1 billion.

Wall Street retreated as investors hit the pause button in advance of Friday's jobs report, while the price of oil CLc1 , one of Canada's largest exports, settled 0.3% higher. loonie is likely to slip in coming months as a collapse in global trade and the prospect of a more prolonged slowdown from the pandemic put pressure on the currency, a Reuters poll showed. 10-year yield CA10YT=RR rose 5.8 basis points to 0.675%, its highest since April 15.

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