CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 77% 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. 77% 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.

Canadian Dollar Forecast: USD/CAD Bears Re-Load at 1.4000 Resistance

Article By: ,  Sr. Strategist

Canadian Dollar, USD/CAD Talking Points:

Now that USD/CAD has pulled back, the big question is whether sellers pounce as a major spot of confluent resistance has come into play.

The sell-off in April was smooth yet aggressive, and even as the USD started to show symptoms of a turn around Easter Monday, USD/CAD continued to grind into support. But bears were losing power and price was starting to show potential for pullback in the pair, as a falling wedge formed to go along with divergent RSI on the daily chart. When I looked at this in the webinar last week, I had highlighted two different zones of resistance that could give bears opportunity to jump in after a bit of re-setting had taken place, and the 1.4000 handle was a logical spot to look for that to happen.

So far, it has, as Monday saw a quick test above the big figure and that was followed by a second trip above yesterday. At this point that resistance remains in-play as sellers have taken a stand, and this illustrates continued bearish control of the short-side trend on the daily chart.

 

USD/CAD Daily Chart

 Chart prepared by James Stanley; data derived from Tradingview

 

Dollar Dilemma

 

As with any major pair the sway of the U.S. Dollar matters and at this point, the USD holds continued potential on the long side as we’ve so far seen a hold of higher-low support after the week began with another higher-high.

Longer-term, there is still question as to whether sellers can re-take the trend as the USD had gotten very oversold in late-April, to the point where pulling fresh sellers into the mix to drive to fresh lows could be a challenge. And now that we have a pullback, there’s an opportunity for bears to show up and continue that trend. But we pretty much need to be focusing on weekly charts for that scenario as the daily USD chart shows continued higher-low support after a higher-high. The weekly, however, has about half of the week to go before the current candle completes, but as you can see, it’s been a hard reaction to the 102.00 level that I looked at in last week’s webinar, with the candle displaying a form of indecision.

 

US Dollar Weekly Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley; data derived from Tradingview

 

From the shorter-term daily or four-hour chart, a bullish argument can still be made as we’ve seen a hold of support at prior resistance. And in DXY, the 100-level continues to loom large, which is nearing confluent with an upward-sloping trendline projection.

This is important – because it seems unlikely for the USD and USDCAD trend to diverge too greatly, at this point, and for those that are looking for either USDCAD or USD weakness, breaking this recent sequence of higher-highs and lows is an important first step to sellers wrestling back control.

 

US Dollar Four-Hour Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley; data derived from Tradingview

 

USD/CAD Bigger Picture

 

At this point I retain the view that USD/CAD is an attractive and perhaps even optimal pairing for USD-weakness scenarios. There’s a few reasons for that, chief of which is the longer-term range that remains in-play on the pair. That’s a big statement after a tenuous few months saw USD/CAD threaten a significant breakout at multi-decade highs. But perhaps even bigger was sellers regaining control to get back below the 1.4000 handle, and then continuing to drive without even a mild pullback, until last week.

Ever since the breakdown I’ve been talking about a 1.4000 re-test and it took almost a month for it to happen, but now that it’s here, we’ve seen sellers defend the level and this retains bearish potential. It will need some help from the broader USD move, and it’s always best to plan for contingencies; so if we do see USD bulls continue to press, then it’s the 1.4150-1.4178 zone in USD/CAD that sits as next key resistance. This is around the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of the 2025 sell-off and that represents a major waypoint for the pair as it was also prior support before the breakdown came into play.

 

USD/CAD Weekly Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley; data derived from Tradingview

 

USD/CAD Shorter-Term Structure

 

Trends take place on timeframes in different ways and shorter-term trends, while often less consistent, can turn into intermediate and then longer-term trends, such as we saw with the bearish turn in USD/CAD during March and April.

The beauty of price action is that its objective, and you can’t really argue against it; it just comes down to a simple matter of perspective and that’s where subjectivity can begin to creep in as we can all see the same picture from a slightly different lens (or time frame).

From the four-hour chart we can see sellers rebuked at the 1.4000 level which then led to the sell-off back to a prior spot of resistance-turned-support, at 1.3905. That so far has held and there’s a couple of different way to move forward on this.

Firstly, for bears, another lower-high would be necessary to keep the market in a bearish short-term state. And given the two prior pokes above 1.4000, ideally that lower-high would arrive inside of the 1.4016 level.

But given the two tests and holds of 1.3905, a double bottom formation can be argued – which is a bullish breakout formation. For that formation to come to life we would need a break of the neckline of the formation (the high between the two lows), which is that 1.4016 price.

So not only would the bearish trend be nullified with a higher-high, but the double bottom would trigger at that point – both bullish items. That would then point to a move that’s approximately the size of the distance from the bottom to the neckline, in this case, about 101 pips, which would imply a push towards 1.4117, getting very close to that next resistance zone at 1.4149-1.4178.

 

USD/CAD Four-Hour Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley; data derived from Tradingview

--- written by James Stanley, Senior Strategist

Canadian Dollar, USD/CAD Talking Points:

 

USDCAD Ad

 

Now that USD/CAD has pulled back, the big question is whether sellers pounce as a major spot of confluent resistance has come into play.

The sell-off in April was smooth yet aggressive, and even as the USD started to show symptoms of a turn around Easter Monday, USD/CAD continued to grind into support. But bears were losing power and price was starting to show potential for pullback in the pair, as a falling wedge formed to go along with divergent RSI on the daily chart. When I looked at this in the webinar last week, I had highlighted two different zones of resistance that could give bears opportunity to jump in after a bit of re-setting had taken place, and the 1.4000 handle was a logical spot to look for that to happen.

So far, it has, as Monday saw a quick test above the big figure and that was followed by a second trip above yesterday. At this point that resistance remains in-play as sellers have taken a stand, and this illustrates continued bearish control of the short-side trend on the daily chart.

 

USD/CAD Daily Chart

 Chart prepared by James Stanley; data derived from Tradingview

 

Dollar Dilemma

 

As with any major pair the sway of the U.S. Dollar matters and at this point, the USD holds continued potential on the long side as we’ve so far seen a hold of higher-low support after the week began with another higher-high.

Longer-term, there is still question as to whether sellers can re-take the trend as the USD had gotten very oversold in late-April, to the point where pulling fresh sellers into the mix to drive to fresh lows could be a challenge. And now that we have a pullback, there’s an opportunity for bears to show up and continue that trend. But we pretty much need to be focusing on weekly charts for that scenario as the daily USD chart shows continued higher-low support after a higher-high. The weekly, however, has about half of the week to go before the current candle completes, but as you can see, it’s been a hard reaction to the 102.00 level that I looked at in last week’s webinar, with the candle displaying a form of indecision.

 

US Dollar Weekly Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley; data derived from Tradingview

 

From the shorter-term daily or four-hour chart, a bullish argument can still be made as we’ve seen a hold of support at prior resistance. And in DXY, the 100-level continues to loom large, which is nearing confluent with an upward-sloping trendline projection.

This is important – because it seems unlikely for the USD and USDCAD trend to diverge too greatly, at this point, and for those that are looking for either USDCAD or USD weakness, breaking this recent sequence of higher-highs and lows is an important first step to sellers wrestling back control.

 

US Dollar Four-Hour Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley; data derived from Tradingview

 

USD/CAD Bigger Picture

 

At this point I retain the view that USD/CAD is an attractive and perhaps even optimal pairing for USD-weakness scenarios. There’s a few reasons for that, chief of which is the longer-term range that remains in-play on the pair. That’s a big statement after a tenuous few months saw USD/CAD threaten a significant breakout at multi-decade highs. But perhaps even bigger was sellers regaining control to get back below the 1.4000 handle, and then continuing to drive without even a mild pullback, until last week.

Ever since the breakdown I’ve been talking about a 1.4000 re-test and it took almost a month for it to happen, but now that it’s here, we’ve seen sellers defend the level and this retains bearish potential. It will need some help from the broader USD move, and it’s always best to plan for contingencies; so if we do see USD bulls continue to press, then it’s the 1.4150-1.4178 zone in USD/CAD that sits as next key resistance. This is around the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of the 2025 sell-off and that represents a major waypoint for the pair as it was also prior support before the breakdown came into play.

 

USD/CAD Weekly Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley; data derived from Tradingview

 

USD/CAD Shorter-Term Structure

 

Trends take place on timeframes in different ways and shorter-term trends, while often less consistent, can turn into intermediate and then longer-term trends, such as we saw with the bearish turn in USD/CAD during March and April.

The beauty of price action is that its objective, and you can’t really argue against it; it just comes down to a simple matter of perspective and that’s where subjectivity can begin to creep in as we can all see the same picture from a slightly different lens (or time frame).

From the four-hour chart we can see sellers rebuked at the 1.4000 level which then led to the sell-off back to a prior spot of resistance-turned-support, at 1.3905. That so far has held and there’s a couple of different way to move forward on this.

Firstly, for bears, another lower-high would be necessary to keep the market in a bearish short-term state. And given the two prior pokes above 1.4000, ideally that lower-high would arrive inside of the 1.4016 level.

But given the two tests and holds of 1.3905, a double bottom formation can be argued – which is a bullish breakout formation. For that formation to come to life we would need a break of the neckline of the formation (the high between the two lows), which is that 1.4016 price.

So not only would the bearish trend be nullified with a higher-high, but the double bottom would trigger at that point – both bullish items. That would then point to a move that’s approximately the size of the distance from the bottom to the neckline, in this case, about 101 pips, which would imply a push towards 1.4117, getting very close to that next resistance zone at 1.4149-1.4178.

 

USD/CAD Four-Hour Chart

Chart prepared by James Stanley; data derived from Tradingview

 

--- written by James Stanley, Senior Strategist

 

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StoneX Europe Ltd makes no representation or warranty and assumes no liability as to the accuracy or completeness of the information provided, nor any loss arising from any investment based on a recommendation, forecast or other information supplied. You should always seek independent advice as to your suitability to speculate in any related markets and your ability to assume the associated risks, if you are at all unsure. We are not under any obligation to update any such material. Any opinion made may be personal to the author and may not reflect the opinion of StoneX Europe Ltd.

CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 67.6% 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. Please ensure you fully understand the risks involved by reading our full risk warning.

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