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Just realized something interesting about the oil-CAD relationship that most people still get wrong.
For years, we all assumed Canada's currency would automatically rally whenever crude prices jumped. Makes sense on paper, right? More oil exports, stronger economy, higher demand for the loonie. That's how it used to work.
But here's what's changed. Look at what happened recently when oil surged—the USD to CAD rate barely budged. Yeah, you read that right. Oil's flying, but the exchange rate just sat there. This broke the old playbook.
I started digging into why this disconnect happened, and it's actually pretty nuanced. The correlation between oil and the Canadian dollar has been slowly eroding over time. It's not dead, but it's definitely not what it was a decade ago.
The thing is, not all oil shocks hit the same way. Where the price movement comes from matters way more than people realize. A supply shock looks different from a demand shock, and geopolitical factors create their own dynamic. The market's gotten smarter about parsing these differences, and that's why we're seeing the USD to CAD relationship behave differently than the old models predicted.
Canada's still an energy exporter, sure. Export revenues and investment flows still matter. But the global economy's more complex now. Interest rates, capital flows, and broader macro trends are increasingly competing with commodity prices for influence on the currency.
It's a good reminder that old correlations can shift without warning. The market's telling us something's changed in how oil shocks transmit through to the Canadian dollar. Paying attention to that shift might save you from some bad trades down the line.