The Canadian dollar has a path higher against the US Dollar, but the Bank of Canada just made clear it won’t be the one clearing that path.
The BoC kept its key interest rate at 2.25%, and Michael Pfister at Commerzbank sees little in the decision that points to near-term tightening, according to FXStreet. The sharper read is this: CAD bulls may need a weaker USD more than a stronger Canada story.
BoC held rates, but the real message was patience
The rate decision itself was not the surprise. Pfister said the BoC held at 2.25% “as expected.” The market signal came from what policymakers did not do. They gave little indication that policy might shift soon.
“As expected, the Bank of Canada (BoC) kept its key interest rate at 2.25% yesterday. At the same time, policymakers gave little indication that this might change in the near future.”
That is a problem for traders looking for sustained CAD strength. A currency usually needs either improving domestic momentum, a more attractive rate path, or pressure on the other side of the pair. Pfister’s read suggests Canada is not currently supplying enough of the first two.
The source points to two reasons: easing core inflation and a weak real economy. If underlying inflation pressure is cooling, the BoC has less reason to tighten. If the real economy is already soft, tightening too soon risks making that weakness worse.
This does not mean the BoC is declaring victory on inflation. It means the hurdle for another hike looks higher.
One hike by December is not enough fuel for a CAD breakout
The cleanest number in the note is market pricing: only one rate hike is currently priced in by December.
That matters more than the rate hold itself. FX markets trade the next move, not just the current setting. A 2.25% policy rate can support a currency if investors think more hikes are coming. It does much less when the expected path flattens.
Pfister’s sequence is straightforward:
- Before: The market could still imagine tighter BoC policy as a source of CAD support.
- Now: Expectations have shifted toward patience, with only one hike priced by December.
- Result: Monetary-policy pressure on the Canadian dollar should ease.
- Catch: A softer policy-pressure story does not automatically mean a stronger loonie.
The last point is the important one. Pfister does not frame the setup as outright bullish for CAD. He argues that with less policy pressure, USD/CAD becomes more dependent on broader US Dollar direction.
“Pressure on the Canadian dollar from monetary policy is likely to ease somewhat accordingly.”
That wording is restrained. It says less drag, not strong lift.
For readers tracking how US data can dominate cross-asset price action, our earlier analysis of Canadian Dollar Grabs a Win as US CPI Fails Bulls offers useful context on why CAD moves can hinge on the US side of the pair. The same macro sensitivity also shows up in risk assets, as covered in Hot CPI Print Could Shove Bitcoin Below $60,000 Fast, though the instruments and transmission channels differ.
The BoC’s caution shifts control of USD/CAD to the US Dollar
Pfister’s strongest line is also the most useful trading takeaway.
“Those anticipating lower USD/CAD levels should therefore continue to hope for a weaker US dollar.”
That is not a full CAD endorsement. It is a warning. If the BoC is cautious, Canada’s side of the trade is unlikely to force USD/CAD lower on its own.
The note also flags USMCA negotiations, a weakening real economy, and political concerns as unresolved problems. Those factors complicate a bullish CAD view because they leave investors with reasons to demand confirmation before buying the loonie aggressively.
Here is the tension:
| Driver | CAD-supportive version | Current signal from the source |
|---|---|---|
| BoC policy | Clear path toward tighter rates | Only one hike priced by December |
| Inflation | Sticky core inflation forces action | Core inflation is easing |
| Growth | Strong activity supports CAD | Real economy is weakening |
| Trade backdrop | Lower uncertainty helps confidence | USMCA negotiations are approaching |
| USD side | Weaker US Dollar pulls USD/CAD lower | Direction depends on broader USD moves |
XOOMAR analysis: This makes CAD rallies fragile. They can happen, especially if the US Dollar weakens. But without a shift in BoC tone or Canadian data, they may struggle to become durable trends.
Borrowers and hedgers get a different signal than currency traders
For FX traders, the message is simple: the BoC is not offering much reason to chase CAD strength. That can make rallies vulnerable unless Canadian inflation or activity data force a repricing.
For Canadian borrowers, the signal is different. A market that prices only one hike by December suggests less immediate fear of repeated rate increases. That does not mean policy is loose. It means the expected tightening path has narrowed.
For companies with USD exposure, Pfister’s logic argues against assuming the Canadian dollar will recover steadily. If USD/CAD depends heavily on broader US Dollar moves, hedging decisions cannot rest on the BoC alone.
XOOMAR analysis: The practical question is not “Will the BoC hike?” It is “What would make markets believe the BoC has to hike sooner than December?” Based on the source, the relevant evidence sits in core inflation, real-economy momentum, USMCA-related uncertainty, and the broader USD trend.
Canada’s currency story now needs a catalyst the BoC did not provide
The old bullish CAD setup would be cleaner if several things aligned at once: firmer Canadian data, a less patient BoC, and a softer US Dollar. The Commerzbank note says that alignment is not here yet.
Pfister even leaves open the possibility that the first hike could come later than December:
“We have argued for some time that, if at all, the BoC's first interest rate hike is unlikely to take place until December. The latest figures, however, now suggest that it might come even later, although there is still plenty of time until then.”
That sentence undercuts any simple bullish CAD read. December is not a launchpad. It is already the patient scenario, and even that timing is not locked in.
The base case from the source is therefore restrained: USD/CAD can fall if the US Dollar weakens, but the Canadian dollar lacks a strong domestic monetary-policy catalyst. A stronger CAD case would need evidence that easing core inflation is reversing, the real economy is firming, or the BoC is becoming less comfortable waiting.
The bearish CAD scenario is just as clear. Softer Canadian growth, continued easing in core inflation, or renewed US Dollar strength would reinforce the idea that the BoC has little reason to hurry.
The next break in USD/CAD will likely come from proof that one side of this pair has changed. If Canadian data push the BoC out of patience mode, CAD gets a domestic catalyst. If not, loonie bulls are left watching the US Dollar do the heavy lifting.
Disclaimer: This XOOMAR analysis is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not financial, investment, legal, tax, or professional advice. It does not provide buy, sell, hold, price-target, portfolio, or personalized recommendations. Verify information independently and consult qualified professionals before making decisions.
The Bottom Line
- The BoC’s cautious stance reduces near-term support for the Canadian dollar.
- CAD bulls may need broad US dollar weakness rather than a stronger Canada policy story.
- Easing core inflation and a weak real economy make another BoC hike harder to justify.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
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