CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
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USD/CAD Outlook: Data Collision at the 200DMA After Bull Trend Break

By :   David Scutt , Market Analyst
  • US CPI and Canadian jobs data scheduled simultaneously on Friday
  • USD/CAD tests 200DMA following trend break
  • Data deluged delivers volatility event, US-Iran talks may override

Summary

Key US inflation and Canadian unemployment data land at the exact same moment later Friday, with USD/CAD straddling the 200DMA beforehand. With the bull trend from early March broken earlier this week, the longevity of this pullback may well be determined by which way the pair deviates from the level in the immediate aftermath, although how US-Iran peace negotiations unfold over the weekend looms as the key swing factor that may ultimately confirm or override the initial reaction.

Source: TradingView

Canada jobs report: noise or genuine turn?

Canada produced a shocker of a jobs report in February, with employment tumbling by 83,900 against expectations for a 10,000 increase. Despite a decline in the participation rate to 64.9%, the unemployment rate still rose two tenths to 6.7%, in part reflecting a sharp 1.3 percentage point jump in youth unemployment to 14.1%. While Canada’s employment report is notoriously volatile, the outcome effectively unwound much of the strength seen in the second half of 2025.

The key question now is whether February was just statistical noise or the start of something more sinister? In March, unemployment is seen lifting to 6.8%, hinting that further deterioration is expected. Such an outcome may allow the Bank of Canada to look through any energy-led inflation surge tied to the Iran conflict, but a stronger report that challenges the February signal would be far more uncomfortable for policymakers, increasing the risk that tightening, not currently expected until well into the second half of the year, is brought forward, supporting the loonie against not only the USD but other majors.

Source: Bloomberg

US inflation: will energy bleed into services?

At the same time the unemployment report is released, the key US March CPI print is expected to show a 0.9% lift in the headline on the back of energy prices. The key question for markets is whether that feeds through into core, with markets likely to be highly sensitive to any evidence of higher energy prices spilling over into services inflation.

That puts the focus on the supercore measure, which strips out housing and energy services categories to reflect underlying services inflation, along with components that feed directly into the Fed’s preferred underlying measure, the core PCE deflator. The February core PCE report, released Thursday, printed at 0.4% for the month and 3% over the year, the latter still a full percentage point above the Fed’s 2% target.

Any further evidence of reacceleration may force markets to begin pricing the risk of hikes from the Fed this year, rather than the 5 basis points of easing currently seen.

Source: TradingView

Data combinations that matter

For USD/CAD, the most powerful bullish outcome would likely be a hot US inflation report alongside a weak Canadian employment report, with the reverse combination likely to deliver the most bearish outcome.

Even with a blockbuster data deluge on deck, it may ultimately prove secondary to events in Islamabad as the US and Iran prepare to meet. Peace talks are scheduled to begin later today and loom as the dominant near-term swing factor for USD/CAD, with the potential to amplify volatility and either supercharge or reverse any data-driven move. Progress towards a lasting agreement would likely support the loonie, while a breakdown in negotiations would almost certainly favour the greenback.

USD/CAD: 200DMA key after trend break

Source: TradingView

While directional risks for USD/CAD look more balanced from a technical perspective following the bull trend break earlier this week, complemented by RSI (14) and MACD rolling over in unison to reflect a loss of upside momentum, it’s difficult to have strong conviction given the number of binary-like risk events ahead. However, there is a focal point for traders to use when assessing setups with the pair sitting just above the influential 200DMA. 

Should the trend break extend below it, 1.3800, the 100DMA, 1.3750 and 50DMA come into immediate focus, followed by 1.3630 and a series of swing lows set earlier this year beneath 1.3550.

Should the 200DMA hold, the former March uptrend needs to be on the radar overhead, along with resistance at 1.3860. If those levels were to give way, it would bring the March swing high of 1.3967 into view, with little in the way of major resistance afterwards until above 1.4050.

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