Canadian Dollar Halts Advance
2026-01-26 14:02
By
Felipe Alarcon
1 min. read
The Canadian dollar steadied near 1.37 per US dollar, halting its advance close to monthly highs as firmer oil prices and a steady domestic policy outlook were increasingly offset by renewed trade and geopolitical uncertainty.
Support continues to come from energy markets, with crude prices rising on slowing Russian fuel oil exports, supply disruptions in key US producing regions, and reduced Venezuelan shipments to China, tightening high-sulphur fuel supply and improving Canada’s terms of trade as the largest crude supplier to the US.
At the same time, inflation dynamics have argued against near-term easing, with headline CPI at 2.4% keeping price growth above the Bank of Canada’s 2% target even as core measures have cooled, reinforcing expectations that the policy rate will remain at 2.25% for longer.
However, gains in the loonie have been capped by renewed trade risk after President Trump threatened 100% tariffs on Canadian goods should Ottawa pursue a trade deal with China.