Canadian Dollar Extends Downturn
2026-01-05 15:31
By
Felipe Alarcon
1 min. read
The Canadian dollar weakened toward 1.38 per US dollar, pulling back from its strongest level since July reached in late December, as a stronger greenback driven by geopolitics collided with fading sources of support for Canada’s currency.
The capture of Venezuela’s leader by US forces triggered an immediate rise in dollar demand as markets reassessed regional risk and the prospect of renewed US access to Venezuela’s vast crude reserves, weighing on commodity linked currencies.
Speculation over future Venezuelan output and an uneven early price response have reinforced concerns that sustained downside in crude would erode a key pillar of Canada’s external earnings and currency support.
At the same time the global oil outlook into 2026 appears softer, with expectations of ample supply and more subdued demand lowering the floor under the loonie.
Domestically, economic growth momentum cooled into Q4 and weakened the case for firm Canadian monetary policy.