Canadian Dollar Lower As OPEC Deal Questioned

 | Sep 30, 2016 02:03AM ET

The Canadian dollar depreciated on Thursday erasing the gains from a day earlier when the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) announced an oil output cut surprising the market who was expecting a freeze. Doubts about the details of the agreement are keeping the price of oil from rising higher and have put pressure on the CAD that awaits Friday’s Canadian GDP figures for the month of July.

Comments all week from U.S. Federal Reserve members have made an interest rate hike this year very likely. Fed Presidents Loretta Mester and Dennis Lockhart both made comments supporting an interest rate, with Philadelphia President Patrick Harker focusing more on the impact of trade. Fed Chair Janet Yellen testimony in Washington continued to include no new information on the rate hike cycle, but understandably was concerned with regulation and oversight after the Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) scandal.

The Final U.S. GDP data for the second quarter delivered positive news for the USD with a higher than expected 1.4% percent growth beating the forecast of 1.3 percent based on the two previous estimates. Unemployment claims rose last week by 3,000 for a 254,000 claims but still under the anticipated 260,000. The job market has been the strongest pillar of the U.S. economic recovery, but as the market gets closer to full employment there are more questions about the quality and wages of the jobs that have replaced those lost after the 2008 crisis.