Canadian dollar touched near 18-month low against the buck
The U.S. dollar weakened as risk appetite waned during Thursday trading, after the arrest of an executive of Chinese telecommunications firm Huawei Technologies, at the request of the U.S., sparked new worries about U.S.-China relations.
Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou was arrested in Vancouver, Canada, for allegedly violating sanctions against Iran. Chinese authorities have demanded her release.
While the U.S. and China seemed to approach a resolution of their trade spat following the G-20 summit last weekend, market hopes are now shaken. Most recently, market participants had also grown cautious of the fact that few details of a potential deal were known after President Donald Trump and Chinese Premier Xi Jinping met at the G-20.
“The latest wave of risk-off attack began at the open of futures [late Sunday] amid the announcement of Canada’s arrest of Huawei’s chief financial officer on behalf of the U.S.,” wrote Adam Button, currency analyst at Intermarket Strategy, adding that it undid the work of any trade deal being done between China and the U.S., which was now reflected in the markets.
U.S. stocks dropped as sentiment deteriorated, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.32% dropped some 500 points at the open.
Currencies recovered some from their peaks and troughs of the trading day. The ICE U.S. Dollar Index DXY, +0.07% was down 0.3% at 96.802, recovering some from its session lows. The buck’s main rival, the EURUSD, -0.0176%strengthened in lock step, last up 0.3% at $1.1374.D
The Australian dollar USDAUD, +0.2494% — a proxy for China and global growth — had started session as the worst performing among development-market currencies, as market participants expect U.S.-China trade relations to remain on edge following the arrest, but recovered slightly as the dollar took a dive. One Australian dollar bought $0.7226, down 0.6%, compared with its session-low of $0.7192.
On Wednesday, the Aussie had been sharply lower versus the buck, as its third quarter gross domestic product print underperformed expectations.
Traditional haven currencies had a field day on the back of the trade concerns, and the U.S. dollar dropped against both the Japanese yen USDJPY, +0.08% and Swiss franc USDCHF, -0.0201% last buying ¥112.65 and 0.9931 franc, both down 0.5%, according to FactSet.
Wednesday’s U.S. economic reports are due along with those on Thursday, following Wednesday’s day of mourning for former President George H.W. Bush’s death. The data deluge included weaker private payrolls in November, a widened trade deficit of $55.5 billion at a 10-year high, but also a stronger-than-expected ISM nonmanufacturing index.
Bank of Canada Gov. Stephen Poloz reiterated the central bank’s worry over global oil prices CLF9, -0.95% and what a slowdown in the global economy could mean for oil demand. On Wednesday, the BOC kept its interest rates unchanged but warned of slowing momentum in Canada’s economy on the back of the drop in oil prices and lower business investments related to trade worries over the summer.
Versus the Canadian dollar USDCAD, +0.0523% the greenback was stronger, last buying C$1.3388, up 0.2%. The loonie, as the Canadian currency is also known, earlier dropped to its lowest level since June of 2017 after hitting a six-month low on Wednesday, according to FactSet data.
In European currencies, the British pound GBPUSD, -0.1252% edged higher once again, as investors become cautiously optimistic that the chance of a hard Brexit is diminishing. Sterling last fetched $1.2778, compared with $1.2735.