European Debt Troubles Drive CAD Higher vs. EUR, Lower vs. USD
The Canadian dollar fell against its US counterpart as the European debt troubles led to the risk aversion sentiment among the investors and after the report showed that Canada’s economic growth unexpectedly stalled.
The Canadian gross domestic product declined 0.1 percent in September. It grew 0.3 percent in the month before and was expected to increase 0.1 percent in September. Canada’s current account deficit widened by C$4.6 billion to C$17.5 billion in the third quarter because of growing imports and declining exports. The previous value was C$13.0 billion and the deficit was predicted to increase just to C$14.9 billion
The European debt crisis continues to weaken
USD/CAD traded near 1.0261 as of 02:11 GMT, the closing level of the yesterday’s session, after it opened yesterday at 1.0179. EUR/CAD dropped from 1.3361 to 1.3322.
If you have any questions, comments or opinions regarding the Canadian Dollar, feel free to post them using the commentary form below.
Tags
Canada, China, Current Account, Dollar, EUR/CAD, Europe, Fiscal Crisis, GDP, USD/CAD
Categories
Earlier News About the Canadian Dollar:
- Canadian Dollar Rises as Crude Oil Reaches Two-Week High (2010-11-30)
- Canadian Dollar Falls as Fundamentals Favor Safe Currencies (2010-11-26)
- Canadian Dollar Surges as Risk Aversion Turns to Risk Appetite (2010-11-24)
- Concern for Ireland's Debt Pushes USD/CAD Higher, EUR/CAD Lower (2010-11-22)
- Week Marked by Optimism for Canadian Currency (2010-11-22)
