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BLBG:Canadian Dollar Pares Gain as Employers Unexpectedly Cut Jobs Last Month
 
Canada’s dollar pared its advance after a government report showed employers unexpectedly reduced jobs in November and the unemployment rate rose.
“That was a real rally killer,” said Blake Jespersen, director of foreign exchange at Bank of Montreal, speaking by phone from Toronto. “The headline number is quite bad. It immediately caused a 50 basis point sell-off in the Canadian dollar.” A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
The loonie, as the currency is also known, was still poised for a 3.4 percent rally this week after central banks including the Bank of Canada acted to make it cheaper for lenders to borrow in dollars to contain European sovereign-debt turmoil, encouraging demand for higher-yielding assets.
The Canadian currency appreciated 0.1 percent to C$1.0126 per U.S. dollar at 7:13 a.m. Toronto time after earlier gaining 0.6 percent. One Canadian dollar buys 98.76 U.S. cents.
The number of jobs fell by a net 18,600 last month, following October’s 54,000 drop, Statistics Canada said today in Ottawa. The unemployment rate rose for a second straight month, to 7.4 percent from 7.3 percent. None of the 23 economists in a Bloomberg News survey predicted a job loss, and the median estimate was for the unemployment rate to be unchanged.
The loonie, as the currency is also known, slid 1.2 percent on Nov. 4 after the statistics agency reported that Canada’s economy lost the most jobs since the 2009 recession.
Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney will keep the target lending rate at 1 percent on Dec. 6, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey. The central bank’s inflation-targeting regime and its “inherent flexibility” allowed the country to handle the global financial turmoil of 2008 and 2009, Carney said in Montreal on Nov. 23.
To contact the reporters for this story: Chris Fournier in Halifax, Nova Scotia, at cfournier3@bloomberg.net; Frederic Tomesco in Montreal at tomesco@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Dave Liedtka at dliedtka@bloomberg.net
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