The Canadian dollar is expected to trade near a five-year low against its US counterpart for much of this year, under pressure from a crash in crude oil prices and an impending US interest rate hike, according to a Reuters poll.
Currency strategists polled by Reuters have slashed their forecasts from a month ago after a rocky start to 2015, with heavy selling that has already knocked down the loonie nearly 2 percent to its weakest since early 2009.
They now predict the Canadian dollar will trade at C$1.18 in 12 months, weaker than the December forecast of C$1.16. The median forecast is C$1.16 in three months and C$1.17 in six months, according to the 42 forecasters polled.
The currency fell about 9 percent last year in its worst performance since 2008, the year the global financial crisis began in earnest. It was trading at C$1.18 on Wednesday.
A plunge of more than 50 percent in oil prices in just six months is partly to blame, as is the prospect that the Bank of Canada will keep interest rates unchanged long after an expected move by the US Federal Reserve this summer.
The US economy grew at a 5 percent annualised rate in the third quarter, its quickest pace in 11 years, giving further support to the view the Fed is gearing up to hike rates for the first time since 2006.
But the outlook is very different for Canada.
"It is hard to see any near-term positives for the Canadian dollar when 25 percent of your exports are energy products and the prices are dropping in half," said Avery Shenfeld, chief economist at CIBC World Markets.
"In this kind of environment, even to get a rate hike in the fourth quarter in Canada, we are going to need to see a significant recovery in oil prices."
Most strategists see these basic interest rate differentials as the main thing holding back the Canadian dollar.
"This will weaken the Canadian dollar on a pretty consistent basis over the course of 2015," said Benjamin Reitzes, a foreign exchange strategist with BMO Capital Markets.