The USD/CAD pair edges lower to near but holds onto Thursday’s gains around 1.4430 in North American trading hours on Friday. The Loonie pair ticks lower after the release of the United States (US) Personal Consumption Expenditure Price Index (PCE) data for January and the Canadian Gross Domestic Product (GDP) data for the December month and the fourth quarter of 2024.
The US core PCE inflation – which excludes volatile food and energy items – grew at a slower pace of 2.6%, as expected, on year against 2.8% in December. On month, the underlying inflation rose expectedly by 0.3%, faster than the former reading of 0.2%.
An expected slowdown in US inflation is expected to provide relief to the Federal Reserve (Fed), which has been endorsing a restrictive interest rate stance. This could also compel them to discuss for how long the borrowing rates should remain in the current range of 4.25%-4.50%.
Meanwhile, the Canadian GDP data has remained mixed. The Canadian economy expanded by 2.6%, compared to same quarter of 2023 and surprisingly faster than 2.2% growth seen in third quarter of the previous year, upwardly revised from 1%. Market participants expected the economy to have expanded at a slower pace of 1.9%.
In December, the Canadian economy grew by 0.2%, the same pace at which it declined in November. Economists expected a higher growth rate of 0.3%.
Broadly, the outlook of the Canadian Dollar (CAD) remains weak as US President Donald Trump has confirmed that he will impose 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico on March 4 for failing to restrict the flow of fentanyl, made in and supplied by China, into the US economy.