
CADCHF represents the live exchange rate between the Canadian dollar and the Swiss franc. CAD is the currency code for the Canadian dollar, and CHF is the Swiss franc. The pair expresses how many Swiss francs one Canadian dollar purchases at any given moment.
The combination of a commodity-linked base and a safe-haven quote gives CADCHF a pronounced risk-on/risk-off character.
Seven factors drive the CADCHF price. The dominant force is crude oil, which reprices the Canadian dollar leg directly through Canada's petroleum export revenues.
The CADCHF exchange rate quotes the number of Swiss francs required to purchase one Canadian dollar. If the pair trades at 0.5700, one Canadian dollar costs 0.5700 francs. The pair moves when either side of the equation changes: rising demand for the Canadian dollar drives CADCHF higher, while a strengthening Swiss franc pushes the price lower.
CADCHF trading works by entering a leveraged position on the Canadian dollar/Swiss franc rate without holding either currency directly. You profit by correctly predicting whether that rate will rise or fall.
The key benefit is oil-linked directional clarity against a safe-haven anchor.
The key risk is dual-leg acceleration during risk-off events, where CAD weakness and CHF strength compound in the same direction against a long position.
Risk no more than 1% of account balance per trade.
The best window is 12:00 to 16:00 UTC, when the North American session overlaps with the late European session.
The overlap concentrates liquidity from both sides of the pair. Canadian economic data releases arrive between 12:30 and 13:30 UTC, repricing the CAD leg in real time. Swiss macro data and SNB communications land during the European morning (07:00 to 09:00 UTC), which provides a secondary window for franc-driven moves. EIA crude oil inventory data, released weekly at 14:30 UTC, generates some of the pair's sharpest intraday moves because it reprices CAD's commodity linkage directly. BoC rate decisions (14:45 UTC on scheduled dates) and SNB quarterly assessments produce the highest single-event volatility for CADCHF. Outside the 07:00 to 16:00 UTC range, order book depth thins and spreads widen. Higher liquidity during the core window produces tighter spreads and lower slippage.
The CADCHF trading strategies include oil correlation trading, BoC–SNB divergence positioning, range trading, and Fibonacci retracement entries.
Oil Correlation Trading. Crude oil reprices the CAD leg directly, creating a tradeable correlation between WTI and CADCHF.
BoC–SNB Divergence Positioning. The 225-basis-point rate differential rewards positioning around shifts in relative monetary policy expectations.
Range Trading. CADCHF consolidates into defined ranges during periods of stable oil prices and unchanged central bank guidance.
Fibonacci Retracement Entries. CADCHF's trending moves following oil shocks or central bank events produce clean pullbacks to Fibonacci levels.
Open the CADCHF live chart and use the Trade Now button to place your first position. Getting started takes five steps:
TMGM quotes a bid and ask price for CADCHF. The gap between them is the spread, which represents the cost of entering the trade. Monitor your open position against the live chart and adjust your stop-loss as the price develops.
You need a minimum of $100 to open a Forex trading account on TMGM and approximately CHF 114 in margin to hold the smallest standard position at full leverage.
Size each position so that no single trade risks more than 1% of account balance.
Go long or short CADCHF on TMGM.
Open a Forex trading accountOr try our free demo account (no deposit required).




