USD/CAD Higher After Fed Inaction And Oil Inventory Draw

 | Jul 27, 2017 01:27AM ET

The Canadian dollar rose on Wednesday after the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) statement kept interest rates unchanged as expected. The biggest highlight of the Fed’s communication was the addition of “relatively soon” to the timing for the start of the central bank’s balance sheet reduction. The September FOMC meeting is seen as a likely candidate to begin trimming the portfolio of assets accumulated during the quantitive easing program.

Weekly US Inventories Fall More than Expected
Oil prices jumped close to 2 percent after the release by the Energy Information Administration (EIA) of the weekly US crude inventories. Oil stocks fell by 7.2 millions barrels, gasoline by 1 million barrels and distillates by 1.9 millions barrels. The larger than expected drawdown pushed oil prices higher as US production is starting to slowdown and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and Russia are not backing down in their plans to extend production cuts to reduce the global oil glut.

Fed Remains Optimistic But Concerned About Inflation
The U.S. Federal Reserve tweaked the language on its July FOMC statement from the one published last month regarding inflation. A slight downgrade was evident as the Fed removed the “somewhat” when talking about inflation declining. The other major change was a big signal toward the balance sheet reduction to start in September. Overall there was nothing new for the market and the downgrade on inflation was seen as dovish which is the main reason the USD is on the back foot across the board. Political uncertainty in Washington is not doing the dollar any favors as the healthcare reform debate continues with low probability of a definite outcome.