Canadian Dollar is holding its ground as one of the month’s best-performing currencies so far, supported by surprisingly strong domestic data despite a slump in oil prices. WTI crude’s drop through 60 last week would normally pressure the Loonie, but September’s upbeat employment figures more than offset that drag.
The standout feature of the report was rebound in manufacturing jobs — the sector’s first monthly gain since January — signaling renewed momentum in an area hard-hit by global trade tensions. The improvement was particularly welcome after a weak summer stretch that had driven the BoC’s 25bps rate cut in September.
Markets are now looking to the October 21 CPI report for confirmation. Inflation would probably need to print well below expectations to confirm the case for another cut on October 29. For now, the data flow leans toward a pause.
Technically, EUR/CAD shows early signs of exhaustion after meeting upside target of 61.8% projection 1.4682 to 1.5959 from 1.5598 at 1.6387. Visible bearish divergence on D MACD reinforces the case that upward momentum is fading.
Sustained break below the 55 D EMA (now at 1.6160) should indicate medium term topping at 1.6402. Deeper decline could then be seen to correct whole five-wave rally from 1.4483 (Nov 2024 low), and target 38.2% retracement of 1.4483 to 1.6402 at 1.5669. Nevertheless, strong bounce from 55 D EMA will retain near term bullishness and set up another rally through 1.6402 instead.
Also, it should be noted that cross-currency dynamics point to growing downside risk for EUR/CAD. EUR/USD has failed to break through the key 1.2000 cluster resistance and has since retreated from 1.1917. Deeper pullback or even a shift toward bearish reversal could be underway.
At the same time, USD/CAD is testing strong cluster resistance near 1.4000, where a corrective dip appears likely after months of steady advance.
Should both patterns materialize—Euro weakening against Dollar while Loonie strengthens versus the Greenback—EUR/CAD would accelerate its decline, reinforcing the view that a medium-term top is in place. However, sustained strength in USD/CAD or stabilization in EUR/USD would shift the odds away from this bearish case in EUR/CAD.

















