TORONTO: The Canadian dollar rallied against its US counterpart on Wednesday, rebounding from a one-week low earlier in the session as oil prices and US stock markets rose after previous losses.
US government data that showed strong demand for gasoline provided the catalyst for a turnaround in crude oil and stocks, providing support for the risk-sensitive commodity linked currency.
"The Canadian dollar is very much still leveraged to what happens in the crude market," said Bipan Rai, executive director, macro strategy at CIBC Capital Markets.
US crude prices settled at $32.15 a barrel, up 0.88 percent.
Bank of Canada Deputy Governor Lawrence Schembri said that the Canadian financial system remains resilient and could withstand a major shock.
Canada's housing market will be a net contributor to economic growth in the coming year, boosted by rising prices, but become a drag soon after due to a slowdown in buying and high levels of household debt, a Reuters poll found.
The Canadian dollar ended at C$1.3687 to the greenback, or 73.06 US cents, stronger than Tuesday's official close of C$1.3768, or 72.63 US cents.
The currency's strongest level of the session was C$1.3678, while it hit its weakest since Feb. 17 at C$1.3860.
The Canadian oil-producing province of Alberta will post a C$6.3 billion deficit this fiscal year as the global crude slump continues to batter the once-booming economy.
Earlier in the week, the federal government warned it would run much bigger deficits than anticipated. However, it will stick to plans to invest in infrastructure projects.
Adding private-sector investment to projects could spur even greater spending, reducing the odds of another Bank of Canada rate cut.
Canadian government bond prices were lower across the maturity curve, with the two-year price down 5.5 Canadian cents to yield 0.495 percent and the benchmark 10-year falling 35 Canadian cents to yield 1.158 percent.
The Canada-US 10-year spread was 3.2 basis points higher at -59.2 basis points as Canadian government bonds underperformed.
The government of Canada C$3.7 billion two-year bond auction produced a 0.479 percent average yield.
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