The Canadian dollar (CAD) is positioned as an attractive funding currency for other pro-cyclical trades. Domestically, data points to persistent economic slack, preventing central bank hikes. Externally, geopolitical shifts impacting oil markets create a negative terms-of-trade shock, reinforcing the case for CAD bearishness.

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The market's hawkish repricing for the Bank of Canada is likely temporary due to underlying economic slack and trade risks. In contrast, Australia's RBA is a more credible potential hiker, supported by resilient growth and higher inflation, making it a "true soft landing candidate" and a better bet for policy tightening.

Because Canada is operating with excess economic capacity, its new fiscal stimulus is seen as supportive but not inflationary. This provides a floor for the Canadian dollar (CAD) without forcing central bank hikes, making it a stable, low-volatility funding currency.

With dollar correlations at elevated levels, finding cheap, clean directional expressions against the dollar is challenging. Sophisticated traders are creating bearish dollar baskets that mix G10 currencies (AUD, NOK) with Emerging Market currencies (HUF, ZAR) to achieve greater pricing efficiency.

A key relative value theme in FX is the widening gap between surging metal prices (gold, copper) and weaker oil prices. This creates a bearish outlook for oil exporters like Canada (CAD) and a bullish case for metal exporters like South Africa (ZAR) and Chile (CLP), amplifying a terms-of-trade driven strategy.

Contrary to conventional wisdom, a rate cut is not automatically negative for a currency. In economies like Sweden or the Eurozone, a cut can be perceived as growth-positive, thereby supporting the currency. This contrasts with situations like New Zealand, where cuts are a response to poor data and are thus currency-negative, highlighting the importance of economic context.

J.P. Morgan's 2026 outlook is "Bearish Dollar, Bullish Beta," favoring pro-cyclical and high-yield currencies. They expect the dollar's decline to be smaller and narrower than in 2025 unless US economic data significantly weakens, shifting from the more aggressive bearishness of the previous year.

The Federal Reserve's dovish stance, combined with a resilient global growth outlook, creates a favorable environment for "pro-cyclical" currencies like the Australian Dollar and Norwegian Krone. This "middle of the dollar smile" scenario suggests betting on currencies sensitive to global economic momentum, not just betting against the dollar.

Instead of directly shorting the US dollar, which can be costly, traders can use the Canadian dollar (CAD) as a more profitable proxy. This approach offers a better "carry" advantage due to interest rate differentials, while still capturing the downside of a weakening USD, especially as the Bank of Canada's policy mirrors the Fed's dovishness.

A bearish Canadian dollar (CAD) position can act as a superior proxy for a bearish US dollar (USD) view. It provides insulation against temporary USD rallies (as USD/CAD rises) and offers better carry efficiency due to the Bank of Canada's dovish stance, making it a lower-beta, potentially higher-return strategy.

Recessionary risks are higher in Canada and Europe than in the U.S. This weakness doesn't drag the U.S. down; instead, it triggers capital flight into U.S. assets for safety. This flow strengthens the dollar and reinforces the American economy, creating a cycle where U.S. strength feeds on others' fragility.