Canadian Dollar Rises to 16-Month High
2026-01-28 15:06
By
Felipe Alarcon
1 min. read
The Canadian dollar strengthened toward 1.35 per US dollar, its strongest level in about sixteen months, as markets digested the Bank of Canada’s latest policy decision and guidance.
While US tariffs and persistent trade uncertainty continue to weigh on Canada’s economy by restraining exports, investment, and labor reallocation, the BoC still projects modest GDP growth of about 1.1% in 2026 and 1.5% in 2027, with excess supply broadly offsetting tariff related cost pressures and keeping inflation close to the 2% target.
At the same time, the move in the loonie was amplified by broad US dollar weakness, with the dollar index trading near a four year low, after President Trump signaled comfort with a softer currency to support exports and renewed criticism of the Federal Reserve fueled policy uncertainty.
Speculation over potential US-Japan coordination to support the yen added pressure.