The loonie has climbed 4 percent since the start of the year, making it the top-performing G10 currency. It fell 7.8 percent in 2018. Data last Friday from the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which had been delayed during a partial shutdown of the US government, and Reuters calculations showed that speculators raised their bearish bets on the Canadian dollar in December to the highest in about five months. As of Dec. 24, net short positions had jumped to 44,692 contracts from 7,457 a week earlier.
Canadian government bond prices were little changed across much of the yield curve, with the 10-year flat to yield 1.959 percent. The gap between Canada's 10-year yield and its US equivalent widened by 3.4 basis points to a spread of 76.6 basis points in favor of the US bond. The price of oil, one of Canada's major exports, fell after disappointing US factory data sparked fresh concerns about a slowdown in the global economy.
US crude oil futures settled 1.3 percent lower on Monday at $54.56 a barrel. Still, oil has rallied about 29 percent since hitting its lowest point in 18 months in December. "I think oil is going to stay firm and the Canadian dollar should stay firm with it," said Ronald Simpson, managing director, global currency analysis at Action Economics.