The Canadian dollar fell to its lowest level since May 2020 after Donald Trump threatened to impose tariffs on Canadian goods shipped to the United States once he takes office in January.
The threat of tariffs added a further drag on the loonie, which has been moving lower against the U.S. dollar since September.
The loonie was at 71.01 cents US in early afternoon trading after dipping below 71 cents US earlier in the day.
BMO Capital Markets senior economist Robert Kavcic said financial markets were responding to increased risk on the trade front.
“It’s a pretty stiff headwind against the currency that’s already been under pressure just from domestic economic factors,” he said.
Kavcic noted the loonie was already being pressured by a softer Canadian economy and interest rate cuts by the Bank of Canada.
The central bank has cut its benchmark rate four times this year. It implemented a half-percentage point cut in October to bring the rate to 3.75 per cent as its concerns shifted from the need to cool inflation to the need for stronger economic growth.
Trump posted to Truth Social on Monday that he will impose a 25 per cent tariff on all products from Canada and Mexico. He said the tariff will remain in place until both countries stop drugs — in particular fentanyl — and people from illegally crossing the borders.
However, Trump’s edict on social media isn’t U.S. government policy yet and even if it comes to pass, it may only be temporary as the president-elect linked it to conditions regarding the border.
Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at Corpay, noted that investors don’t expect Trump to follow through.
“Canadian Prime Minister (Justin) Trudeau has already shown signs of capitulating to Trump’s demands, and the president-elect’s history would suggest that last night’s post simply represented an opening gambit in the negotiation process,” he wrote in a note to clients.
“The Canadian dollar seems poised for modest reversal to the upside once traders assess the situation from a more nuanced perspective.”
While a weaker loonie raises the costs for Canadians looking to do cross-border shopping this week on Black Friday, it also makes Canadian goods cheaper for buyers with U.S. dollars, offsetting in part some of the costs of any potential tariffs for Americans.
Any tariffs may also include carve-outs for specific industries such as oil and gas and the auto sector, which sees parts zip back and forth across the border before their final assembly in a car or truck.
“The energy sector doesn’t make sense because they don’t have an ability to readily replace three million barrels a day of production,” Kavcic said.
“And then there are other areas like autos where the industry is so integrated.”