Canadian dollar to strengthen; analysts see 'systemic weakness' for USD through 2025
ATB Capital Markets head of currencies Bill Kellett says the story remains one of U.S. dollar weakness, rather than loonie strength. He expects both currencies will underperform through the remainder of the year, with the American dollar falling harder than Canada's currency.
'USD weakness will likely outpace CAD weakness, setting up for a move lower in USD/CAD,' he wrote in a research report on Monday. 'We anticipate USD/CAD will drift moderately lower over the second half of 2025, edging down to the low 1.3000's.'
U.S. President Donald Trump's chaotic trade agenda continues to stoke fears of rising inflation and softer growth among global investors. Uncertainty linked to Trump's unpredictable bursts of tariffs against major economies has raised questions about the stability of the U.S. dollar and its role as the global reserve currency.
'While dramatic capital rotation out of the U.S. is not a sustainable reality, the USD is showing signs of longer-term systemic weakness,' Kellett wrote. 'We expect the theme of USD weakness will continue through the balance of 2025, and this variable will be the main overarching factor impacting FX markets.'
CIBC economists Avery Shenfeld and Katherine Judge agree.
'The Canadian dollar has remained on a strengthening trajectory recently, but that continues to be a reflection of the broad USD falling out of favour with investors, rather than a case of strong Canadian fundamentals,' they wrote in the bank's July foreign exchange report.
'Markets are pricing in a slightly more modest dose of easing from the Bank of Canada than we expect, and look to be too optimistic on Fed cuts,' they added.
'That leans towards pressure on the loonie in the near term, but progress on trade negotiations over the next few months could be an offset, leaving USDCAD relatively stable at 1.37 into the end of Q3.'
Jeff Lagerquist is a senior reporter at Yahoo Finance Canada. Follow him on X @jefflagerquist.
Download the Yahoo Finance app, available for Apple and Android.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
a few seconds ago
- Bloomberg
Bloomberg Daybreak: Trump Issues Warning to Putin
On today's podcast: 1) President Donald Trump warned he would impose 'very severe consequences' if Vladimir Putin didn't agree to a ceasefire agreement later this week, following a call with European leaders ahead of his meeting with the Russian president. 2) Wall Street traders kept piling into bets that the Federal Reserve will soon be able to cut interest rates, with stocks hitting all-time highs and Treasury yields falling alongside the dollar. 3) Cisco Systems Inc., the largest maker of machines that run computer networks and the internet, gave a lukewarm forecast for the current fiscal year, disappointing investors who hoped for a boost from massive AI data center projects.


Bloomberg
a few seconds ago
- Bloomberg
The Government Is Right to Limit Your Investment Choices
America is a free country. People are allowed to take all sorts of ill-considered risks: They can day-trade put-options, bet on sports from their phones, even go BASE-jumping. But unless they are wealthy, they can't invest in private assets. That may be about to change. Last week President Donald Trump issued an executive order to allow people to invest their 401(k) in private assets, and meanwhile the US House is considering a bill that would allow more people to buy unregulated securities. The goal is clear — to sweep away rules that restrict Americans' ability to invest in private equity and private credit.


Bloomberg
a few seconds ago
- Bloomberg
Wall Street's Bullishness on IPOs Only Extends So Far
Bloomberg News is now tracking the daily gyrations and cumulative impact of Donald Trump's second term on stocks, the dollar, 10-year Treasury notes, gold and Bitcoin. Click here to see the tracker . Given the persistent optimism in stock markets, you'd think it would be a perfect time to pull off that long-planned initial public offering. But as private equity firms are finding out in the US, it's not that simple.