The Telegram (St. John's)

Trade data adds to economic recovery hopes

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The Canadian dollar strengthen­ed against its U.S. counterpar­t on Thursday as domestic data showing a narrower-than-expected trade deficit supported hopes of economic recovery, with the loonie moving in reach of a one-week high it notched the previous day.

Canada posted a trade deficit of C$677 million in May as exports jumped 6.7 per cent, data from Statistics Canada showed. Analysts had forecast a deficit of $3 billion.

“This report is consistent with the V-shaped recovery story, as activity picked up in

May after the economy bottomed in April,” said Ryan Brecht, a senior economist at Action Economics.

In a V-shaped recovery, activity rebounds quickly after a sharp decline.

“Yet uncertaint­y remains elevated, with the resurgence in virus cases and pause in reopenings prompting worries that the recovery stalled in late June,” Brecht said.

Several U.S. states, along with some other parts of the world, are reversing or pausing reopenings to tackle a recent surge in infections.

The loonie was trading 0.2 per cent higher, at $1.3563 to the greenback, or 73.73 U.S. cents. The currency, which on Wednesday touched its strongest intraday level since June 24 at $1.3541, traded in a range of $1.3563 to $1.3611.

The Canadian dollar is likely to gain over the coming year if a potential economic recovery from the coronaviru­s crisis boosts stocks and the price of oil, assets closely tracked by the currency, toward pre-pandemic levels, a Reuters poll showed.

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