Switch Out Of Canadian Dollars Into U.S. Dollars

 | Apr 03, 2016 06:11AM ET

As a Brit I well understand the deep admiration the Canadians have for their powerful neighbors south of the border, even if it is not always expressed. The good news in this update is that now is the time to “put your money where your mouth is” when it comes to admiring the Yanks, by changing your Canadian dollars immediately into US dollars, the prime reason being that the Canadian looks set to drop after a big rally from mid-January, while the US dollar looks set to surprise by rallying away from the danger zone of the support around 93 on the dollar index.

Conventional wisdom has it that the dollar is now doomed because the Fed has just chickened out of raising rates again, but what the market is overlooking is that the Fed can blow hot and cold on interest rates anytime they like, and since the market hangs sycophantically on their every word, only words are required, not actions. Furthermore, the outlook for the dollar is actually determined by factors other than whether or not the Fed decides to hike rates by a microscopic quarter of a percent, factors like the Chinese economy imploding and dragging the world into depression, with the potential for mass liquidation driving another ramp in the dollar.

In any event what we are going to look at here predicates a dollar recovery and another drop in most other currencies, including and especially the Canadian dollar. We’ll start by looking at the US dollar itself and then proceed to look at the Canadian dollar.

The US dollar has had a rough ride since it peaked early last December when the market started to figure out that it had been “led up the garden path” by the Fed for nearly 18 months with its lofty talk of “normalization” with a new cycle of rising rates. So that it couldn’t be accused of lying it did a tiny rate rise in December, knowing that it could retract it later in pursuit of the nirvana of endless QE and NIRP – and a point to grasp here is that endless QE and NIRP won’t necessarily cause the dollar index to drop – not if the rest of the world can be encouraged to do likewise, and perhaps on a grander scale. So the Fed can start talking about raising rates again if the dollar starts looking really shaky, as it has been in recent weeks. On the 1-year chart for the dollar index we see that it has arrived at a downside channel target just above strong support in an oversold condition, a situation that calls for a recovery, especially given the now bearish COTs for most other currencies.