Canadian Dollar Falls on Weak Jobs Data Amid Mixed NFP Report

The  Canadian dollar today fell against its US counterpart following the  release of  weak Canadian jobs data for  March in  the  early American session. The  USD/CAD currency pair rallied to  new highs following the  release of  the  weak jobs data from Canada as  well as  the  upbeat US non-farm payrolls report.
The  USD/CAD currency pair today rallied from a  low of  1.3345 in  the  European session to  a  high of  1.3402 following the  dual jobs reports before retracing some of  its gains.
The  currency pair headed lower in  the  Asian session amid stable crude oil prices as  tracked by  the  West Texas Intermediate, which hit a  high of  62.65, before breaking higher in  the  European session. The  pair rallied into the  American session where it jumped higher following the  release of  the  Canadian labour force survey for  March by  Statistics Canada. According to  the  report, the  job market lost 7,200 jobs instead of  adding 1,000 jobs as  expected. The  unemployment rate remained stable at  5.8% as  was expected, while average hourly earnings grew by  2.3% beating expectations set at  2.2%.
The  pair’s rally was further boosted by  the  upbeat non-farm payrolls report released by  the  Bureau of  Labor Statistics, which came in  at  196,000 versus the  expected 180,000. The  US unemployment rate remained stable at  3.8% in  line with expectations.
The  currency pair’s future performance is likely to  be influenced by  crude oil prices and  geopolitical events over the  upcoming weekend.
The  USD/CAD currency pair was trading at  1.3380 as  at  14:43 GMT having risen from a  low of  1.3345. The  CAD/JPY currency pair was trading at  83.46 having fallen from a  high of  83.68.

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