
Canadian Dollar Notches Biggest Weekly Gain In Five Years -

“Bond and stock market selloffs point to investors exiting U.S. assets in response, with resulting pressure on the U.S. dollar serving as a benefit to the Canadian dollar.” The U.S. Dollar (.DXY) fell against a basket of major currencies and benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury yields were on track for their biggest weekly increase in more than two decades. U.S. consumer sentiment deteriorated sharply in April and 12-month inflation expectations surged to the highest level since 1981. Investors see a roughly 60% chance the Bank of Canada pauses its easing campaign at a policy decision on Wednesday. Last month, the central bank lowered its benchmark interest rate to 2.75% and said it would“proceed carefully with any further changes” to rates given the need to assess both the upward pressures on inflation from higher costs and the downward pressures from weaker demand. Canadian bond yields moved higher across the curve but the move was less than for U.S. Treasury yields. The 10-year was up 2.7 basis points at 3.269%, after earlier touching its highest level since January 24 at 3.309%.

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