- USD/CAD weakens as the oil-sensitive Canadian Dollar draws support from higher crude prices.
- Oil prices advanced after an attack on a vessel near Oman disrupted UN evacuations through the Strait of Hormuz, reviving concerns over global energy supplies.
- Meanwhile, the US Dollar could remain supported by rising expectations of a Federal Reserve rate hike, which continue to bolster demand for the Greenback.
USD/CAD extends its decline for a second straight session, hovering near 1.4200 during Friday’s Asian trading hours. The pair comes under pressure as the commodity-linked Canadian Dollar gains support from stronger crude oil prices. Canada, one of the world’s largest net oil exporters, relies heavily on petroleum exports as a key source of foreign exchange revenue.

Oil prices climbed after a suspected projectile strike on a cargo vessel near Oman forced the United Nations to suspend evacuation operations through the strategically important Strait of Hormuz, reigniting concerns over global energy supply disruptions.
Geopolitical tensions escalated further late Thursday after two US officials claimed Iranian forces had opened fire on the vessel while it was transiting the strait. Iranian authorities later warned that ships operating outside designated Hormuz routes could no longer be assured safe passage.
However, losses in USD/CAD may remain capped as the US Dollar continues to draw support from increasing expectations of another Federal Reserve rate hike. CME FedWatch data currently shows markets pricing in a 63.4% chance of a rate increase at the Fed’s September 15–16 meeting.
The hawkish outlook has been reinforced by stronger inflation readings. The headline Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index accelerated to 4.1% year-over-year in May from 3.3% previously, marking the first time in three years that the gauge has risen above 4.0%. The surge was largely driven by higher energy costs linked to Middle East tensions, keeping expectations for additional tightening alive.
Meanwhile, the Fed’s preferred inflation measure, the core PCE index, edged higher to 3.4% annually from 3.3%, its strongest pace since October 2023, underscoring persistent inflation pressures that continue to underpin the Greenback.
Leave a comment