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USD/CAD Breaks Higher: Is the Loonie's Slide Just Getting Started?
Abstract:The Canadian dollar is having a rough run, and the charts are backing up the pain. USD/CAD has pushed out of a long-standing consolidation range and driven toward the 1.4250 area, leaving traders aski
The Canadian dollar is having a rough run, and the charts are backing up the pain. USD/CAD has pushed out of a long-standing consolidation range and driven toward the 1.4250 area, leaving traders asking a simple question: is this breakout built to last, or is a snapback coming?
The Technical PictureAccording to Societe Generale strategist Kenneth Broux, the pair's recent breakout from its extended trading range has real follow-through. While price action has cooled off slightly after tagging resistance near 1.4250, there's no clear evidence yet of a sustained reversal. What matters most now is 1.4130 — the top of the old consolidation range — which has flipped from resistance to support. As long as that level holds, the broader uptrend in USD/CAD stays intact.
If 1.4130 does give way, that would open the door to a deeper corrective move. On the upside, though, the next targets sit at 1.4335 and then 1.4425, based on standard breakout projections.
Positioning Is Stretched — But That's Not Stopping the MoveHere's where it gets interesting for traders watching momentum. Broux notes that few G10 currencies look as technically oversold as the Canadian dollar right now — yet dip-buyers looking for a mean-reversion trade haven't shown up in any meaningful way above the 1.42 handle. That's a telling sign: stretched positioning alone isn't enough to turn this trend around when the underlying macro drivers are still pointing the same direction.
CFTC futures data back this up. Short CAD positioning has climbed to roughly 43.5% of open interest, the most bearish reading since mid-December 2025. That's a heavily one-sided market — normally a setup that invites a squeeze — but so far, sentiment and rate differentials are overriding the crowded-trade risk.
Why Rate Differentials Still Favor the GreenbackUSD/CAD last traded at these levels back in April 2025, in the immediate aftermath of the "Liberation Day" tariff shock. But the macro backdrop has shifted meaningfully since then: two-year rate differentials between the US and Canada have widened to around 142 basis points, reflecting how the market has repriced the Fed's policy outlook. That widening gap is doing a lot of the heavy lifting behind USD strength against the Loonie.
Canada's Domestic Backdrop: Mixed SignalsOn the fundamental side, the Bank of Canada's latest quarterly business outlook survey added some nuance to the picture. The report pointed to a spike in inflation expectations tied to the Gulf conflict, which in turn is pushing Canadian oil producers toward higher investment and production plans — a modest silver lining for a commodity-linked currency, even as broader sentiment stays weak.
Markets are now turning their attention to Friday's Canadian labour market report. May's employment print was a blowout, coming in at 87.8k — strong enough to lift the three-month average to a positive reading (28k) for the first time since January. Expectations for the upcoming release are considerably more modest, with consensus looking for a moderation to around 10k. A weaker-than-expected print could reinforce the bearish CAD narrative; a surprise beat, on the other hand, could be the spark that finally triggers some of that overdue mean-reversion buying.
What This Means for Traders- Key support: 1.4130 — a breach here would be the first real technical warning sign for USD/CAD bulls.
- Upside targets: 1.4335, then 1.4425, if the breakout holds.
- Watch: Friday's Canadian jobs data, which could be the near-term catalyst that either extends or interrupts the current trend.
- Positioning risk: With short CAD bets at their most crowded since December 2025, any sharp fundamental surprise could trigger an outsized reaction in either direction.
As always, stretched positioning is a reason for caution, not necessarily a trading signal on its own. The trend remains the trend until the technical levels — and the macro data behind them — say otherwise.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Trading forex and CFDs involves significant risk and may not be suitable for all investors.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.

