USD to CAD and Why it Matters to You
USD to CAD. What is it? You hear the term everywhere in Canada. You hear it mentioned on TV, on the radio. You see it online and in the newspapers. There are even Facebook groups dedicated to it. Why do people care so much about it? People write reports about it and debate it passionately and care a lot about where it is and where it is going in the future. It seems to change all the time. What in the world is it and why should you care?
The term USD to CAD is generally denotes the “US dollar to
Canadian dollar exchange rate”. It is
the price of 1 US dollar in Canadian dollars.
For example, a USD to CAD rate of 1.27 means that each US dollar is
worth 1.27 Canadian dollars. It also
means that 1 Canadian dollar is worth 0.79 in US dollars. This last number is sometimes known as the
inverse rate because it is equal to the inverse of USD to CAD (ie: 1/1.27 =
0.79).
The USD to CAD exchange rate (like all other
exchange rates) changes from second to second as buyers sellers and speculators
transact with one another. The Bank of
Canada provides a daily exchange rate lookup as well as historical USD to CAD
rates but does not provide “live” rates that reflect minute to minute changes
during the day. You can see the live USD
to CAD rates quotes on sites like Interchange Financial. While the rate changes all the time, on a
daily basis the changes tend to be within a penny. While larger changes can and do happen, it
would be rare to see a day with a larger than one penny change more than once a
week.
While the daily changes in USD to CAD are often
small, they can add up in many ways to make an impact to people doing USD to
CAD exchanges. For example, even a one
penny change means that if you are exchanging 10,000, you will receive a
hundred dollars more (or less). Also, the
changes can accumulate over several days or months to add up to larger
amounts. For example, during one three
month period recently the Canadian dollar moved by 20 pennies. That same 10,000 exchange would now get 2000
more (or less depending on what you are exchanging).
So, that’s it.
That’s what all the hoopla is about when it comes to USD to CAD. It is
a simple concept but it is also very important to Canadian society and economy. Why is it important? It is important because Canada has a very
open economy and interaction with people and businesses outside of Canada is
very normal. USD to CAD can impact
everything from the smallest transaction involving someone ordering shampoo on
Amazon to someone buying property in Arizona to an immigrant moving money from
the USA to Canada to a Canadian company paying bills in California to a
Michigan company buying steel in Canada to an investor selling his stocks in US
companies.
Let us consider just one of those
examples. Take a sophisticated Canadian
investor who holds stock in Apple. The
investor has done well and the stock is up 20% over his holding period. He is ready to sell it and cash out his
investment to purchase a new house in Canada.
After he sells his Apple stock, he will hold a bunch of US dollars in
his brokerage account. He needs to
convert that amount to Canadian dollars.
What if the USD to CAD rate moved down 30% during his holding
period? Now, in Canadian dollars, his
return is actually negative 10%. In
Canadian dollar terms, he has lost money.
That house he thought he could buy with his investment? It is no longer available to him.
At this point, you might be thinking that USD to CAD matters only to large transactions. Not true.
Let’s say you are buying a new bike online. The seller is located in the US. When you first see the bike you want the USD
to CAD rate is 1.27. When you go back in
a month, the USD to CAD rate has moved to 1.34.
Well, that bike just got 6% more expensive for you.
What if you never buy anything from outside of
Canada? USD to CAD still impacts
you. Why? Because just about everything you buy in
Canada has some sort of input that is priced in US dollars. Oranges at the supermarket? They are from California. Car made in Windsor? Most of the parts are from the US. T-shirt made in China at Walmart? The importer paid in US dollars to buy
it. Wine made in BC? The gasoline used to transport it is priced
in US dollars. In general, when USD to
CAD goes up, everything gets more expensive.
Given its importance to nearly everything in
Canada, it is perhaps not surprising that The Bank of Canada and the Government
of Canada watch the USD to CAD rate very closely. They like to say that the rate is set by
markets, which is true, but it really impacts everything so they follow it closely
and even sometimes try to influence it.
If USD to CAD gets too low then Canadian companies have trouble
competing in international markets because their exports become too
expensive. On the other hand, if it gets
too high then things get very expensive for Canadians living at home.
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