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Canadian dollar jumps to 2016 high near 74 US

The Canadian dollar gained nearly a cent on Thursday, rising to its highest level of the year on signs that oil prices may be starting to stabilize.
After dropping to a 13-year low earlier this year, the Canadian dollar has quietly been on a bit of a rally and is now worth 74 cents US. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

The Canadian dollar gained nearly a cent on Thursday, rising to its highest level of the year on signs that oil prices may be starting to stabilize.

The loonie closedat 73.85 centsUS , up 0.79of a cent after havingmovedconsistently higher throughout the day.

"We're seeing a general bounce-off of those January lows," said Gareth Watson, vice-president at Richardson GMP Ltd. "Maybe it's just some recognition in the market that the Canadian dollar got oversold."

The Canadian dollar has been closely linked with the price of oil in recent years, and Thursday's catalyst for the loonie's rally seemed to be growing evidence that the cratering price of oil has managed to find a floor price of around $30 US a barrel.

The price of West Texas Intermediate gained 80 cents to close at $32.95 US a barrel in New York. "Correlations between WTI and the [Canadian dollar] may have weakened modestly but signs that crude prices have stabilized (and might even improve a little more near-term) have boosted the [Canadian dollar]," Scotiabank said in a note.

After a rough start to 2016 in which the loonieat one point dropped to its lowest level in 13 years at 68 cents US, the loonie has quietly strung together a solid coupleof weeks against many other world currencies through most of February, up strongly against the euro, the pound and the Mexican peso. Since mid-January, the loonie is up by about 8 per cent against the U.S. dollar about as much as oil prices have firmed over the same timeframe.

Investors are starting to return to the loonie in part because it seems less likely that the Bank of Canada will cut rates again, since the federal government has telegraphed it plans to post huge deficits in the coming years to stimulate the economy.

That spending on infrastructure takes pressure off the central bank to cut rates again, which would have been bad news for the loonie. So at least in the short term, a lack of bad news qualifies as good news for Canada's hard-hit currency.

Expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve will boost interest rates multiple times this year have also declined.

Add it all up and there's suddenly reason for optimism when it comes to Canada's currency.

As BMO economist Doug Porter put it: "take a less-frothy U.S. dollar, less-awful oil prices, and a Bank of Canada on hold (for now), and presto-chango and the currency is suddenly on fire."

With files from The Canadian Press