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BusinessAnalysis

How low can the loonie go? A look at how to decide: Don Pittis

The Canadian dollar won't fall forever. History is pretty firm on that count. In the meantime there is lots riding on how much further the loonie will drop and when it will begin to bounce back. Don Pittis looks at some of the considerations.

When will the loonie fly north? Canadians and many others are placing their bets

A worker in Winnipeg inspects a freshly minted Canadian dollar. Canadians are keeping a close eye on the loonie's value, and where it will go next depends on who you believe. (Reuters)

Now and again over the years, acquaintances at the CBCplanning a trip abroad have popped by to ask me where theCanadian dollar is going next. Withone investment bank, Macquarie,predictingthe loonieis heading for 59 cents US, it's no longer just travellers who ask.

Rather than explaining how impossible it is to predict the value of currencies andhow I would now be living a life ofluxury on the avails of currency speculation if I actually knew,I've learned to give a shortanswer thatalwaysseemedtosatisfy.

Before getting to that,I thought it worthwhile to offer up a slightly longer answer about what causes currencies to rise and fallto helpyouto reach your own conclusions about the future value of the loonie.

Predicting where a currency will go next matters to most Canadians because ofa holiday or worries about the cost of imports, but it is alsoa high-stakes game played by the world's biggest financial institutions. Currency traders buy and sell trillions of dollars' worth of dollars, dinars and dong every day.

An inexact science

And completely unlike what you might think,considering the moneyat stake, deciding on the correct price of a currency isfar from an exactscience. Not only that, but currency values zig and zag on very slender news. Yesterday the loonie traded up and down by almost a full cent while nothing really important happened.Traders notoriously run with the pack, selling when others are selling and buying when others buy.
Waiting for the loonie to spreads its wings. History tells us that the Canadian currency will rise again. (Shutterstock)

A market based so heavily on psychology means smart traders don't need hard data on currency flows so much as information on triggers that they think will make others buy or sell. Barring hard news on changes in interest rates, day-to-day trading is self-referential. To put it politely, it is like a snake eating its own tail.

In other words, the same gossip that influences you, including Macquarie'spredictionsthat the looniewill plungeto 59 cents against the greenback, is also affecting currency traders, even if they scoff at the prediction.

Inthe case of the loonie, one of biggest drivers everyone has discussed is the falling price of oil.

It does not take much deconstruction to convince you that oil should not be nearly so influential on the Canadian dollar as many have said.As oil and other resource exportsfallin value theybecomea smaller and smaller partof Canada'seconomic activity, and have less influence on our currency.

Yesterday, for example the Canadian currency plunged to new lows while oil actually closed higher.

"As the term 'petroloonie'suggests, most investors are aware that the value of the Canadian dollarfollowsthepriceof oil," wrote Scott Barlow in Tuesday'sGlobe and Mail before going on to slam the idea, pointing out thata betterindicator of the value of the loonie was the relative returnof Canadian and U.S. bonds.

A move by the Bank of Canada to cut interest rates next week may have a much greater effect on the value of the loonie than will the price of oil according to some currency watchers. (Reuters)

Polozrate cut?

The 59 cent advocatesatMacquarie think Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz will announce a cut in rates as part ofnext Wednesday's Monetary Policy Report. If the Bank of Canada does cut rates,Barlow suggests the loonie will fall to67 UScents.

For what it's worth, what I heard in Poloz's last speech was not another cut in rates. He implied the low dollar was already beginning to work its magic. All we had to do was wait. To cut rates again would be liketurning the thermostat up to 30 C when you're cold, then opening the window when it inevitably getstoo hot.

The fact is, large and frequent shifts, up or down,in the value of currency are not good for an economy. With profit margins thin, the success or failure ofexporters and importers begins to depend more on the whims of currency, rewarding a lucky guess more than good products and efficient management. Repeated swings couldwell discourage small producers from taking the leap beyond Canadian markets, the crucial step that Poloz says is needed to rebuild the non-resource export economy.

The other confusing thing is that despite a huge wave of gloom just now, it would not take much to reverse the slide in the price of oil. After all,the banks that are now predicting $10 and $20 dollar oil completely failedto foresee today's $30 price tag, otherwise they would have shorted the world supply and now bevery rich indeed.

The same goes for the people forecastingextreme changes in the value of the looniewith such confidence. If they hadreally known, would they still be working as bank analysts, orwould they be sailing their yachts off Monaco?

So what should Canadians do? Deciding where to investis in many waysthe same problem as the one faced bypeople taking trips abroad.If you put your money into the U.S. dollar and the loonie rises, you lose.Ditto ifthe loonie falls and you fail to switch currencies.

My advice to travellers is nowalways the same."Switch half now," I tell them, "and half when you travel." Split the difference and no matter which way the currency swings, you feel as ifyou are better off than you might have been.

Follow Don on Twitter@don_pittis

More analysisby Don Pittis