Japan's Misfortune Good News for Canadian Market

Commodities and the Canadian dollar have continued to strengthen despite the rally in the U.S. dollar. That's odd, because for nine months, the U.S. dollar was involved in an inverse relationship with commodities, the Canadian dollar, equities, and emerging markets.

That relationship ended in late November as the dollar began its now, six-week old recovery.

It was often reported, from March to November 2009, that commodities prices were rising as a by-product of the falling U.S. dollar. That, indeed was doubly so. Speculative interest in commodities was driving prices higher, while rising short interest in the U.S. dollar, and record deployments of institutional cash were sending the currency lower, against the yen, and euro...

Find out why its possible Canadian stocks, bonds, the loonie, the commodity complex could remain relatively stable, and possibly go higher, though modestly.

Read the whole article here...

Pierre Daillie (AdvisorAnalyst.com), GlobeAdvisor.com, January 11, 2009

Advertisement


Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

Positives for Gold

Next Article

Gold Outlook 2010: Gold Resuming its Historical Monetary Role – as the Anti-Currency

Related Posts
Subscribe to AdvisorAnalyst.com notifications
Watch. Listen. Read. Raise your average.