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The Canadian Dollar (CAD) is hovering near the upper boundaries of its year-to-date range against the US Dollar, underperforming as one of the weakest major currencies in recent weeks. A sharp correction in Gold prices, sluggish relative economic growth, and negative bond yield spreads with the US have combined to create persistent headwinds for the Loonie.
As the market prepares for critical central bank decisions, major financial institutions are weighing whether the currency is poised for an immediate stabilization or if it will face prolonged pressure.

Declining commodity prices and widening yield gaps drag the Loonie lower
Macro strategy experts at National Bank Canada (NBC) point out that Canada's lagging economic growth relative to the outperforming US economy is actively penalizing the local currency.
While strong full-time employment numbers prevent a formal recession narrative, a clear downtrend in Gold prices and unfavorable two-year interest rate spreads mean that any structural, long-term appreciation for the Canadian Dollar remains heavily dependent on securing a favorable trade agreement with Washington.
We expect the CAD to remain under pressure. Appreciation should resume, but a sustained rally will likely require Ottawa to secure a trade accord with the US this summer.
Disconnected spot premiums signal room for short-term technical bounce
The analyst team at Scotiabank sees conditions falling into place for a near-term pause in the Canadian Dollar's sell-off. They note that the currency pair has retested major resistance ceilings established earlier in the year without triggering aggressive new selling. Because current spot exchange rates are trading significantly above fair value estimates, improving global risk sentiment could pave the way for a corrective recovery.
Neutral: with a near pinpoint retest of the late March high at 1.3967 achieved, the CAD may be able to steady for now. Short-term price signals lean modestly USD bearish, but broader dynamics remain bullish.
Banks anticipate near-term stabilization ahead of eventual recovery
The banks anticipate a stabilizing yet ultimately recovering trend for the Canadian Dollar. In the immediate term, Scotiabank expects the currency to find its footing and potentially experience a minor rebound as overhead technical resistance holds firm and the US Dollar drifts. Looking further out, National Bank Canada projects that while the CAD will remain suppressed in the very near term, the pressure will eventually ease, allowing the currency to resume an upward trajectory and driving the USD/CAD pair down to a target of 1.3500 by year-end.
(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)












