Canadian Dollar Caught Between OPEC Cuts And US Production

 | May 17, 2017 12:51AM ET

The US dollar is lower against majors pairs after the news that President Donald Trump shared sensitive information with Russia. The oil price surge has appreciated the Canadian dollar as both political risk and commodity factors are favouring the loonie, as the currency is known.

The joint announcement on Monday by Russia and Saudi Arabia about a nine month extension to the OPEC production cut has crude prices and the CAD higher ahead of the US weekly inventories. The Canadian dollar had been one of the worst performers of 2017 after the Trump administration had changed the tone on trade with Canada and US shale drillers increasing production.

The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) will release the weekly crude oil inventories on Wednesday, May 17 at 10:30 am EDT. Analysts are forecasting a drawdown of 2.5 million barrels, the sixth decline in a row.

The previous week the market was caught off guard with a higher than expected fall of 5.2 million barrels drove prices higher. The oil production cut extension announcements by Saudi Arabia and Russia were backed up today by supporting comments from Iraq, Iran and Kuwait. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) agreed with other major producers to cut output starting in January.

The price of West Texas has rebounded after touching five months lows early in the month. The biggest obstacle to the OPEC cuts has been the ramp up in non-OPEC production. The US has increased its output by about 10 percent since 2016. Demand has remained stagnant with some promising news out of China but not enough to offset the current glut.