DAILY TRADING: USDCAD Analysis 16 July 2026: Loonie Holds Near 1.4047 as Oil Rally Meets BoC Pause
The Vantage USDCAD CFD traded near 1.40474 as of the 09:12 UTC (17:12 GMT+8) cut-off on 16 July 2026, based on the TradingView setup used for this analysis. The pair has spent two sessions stabilising after a sharp mid-week drop, with oil prices, monetary policy expectations and broader US dollar weakness all shaping USD to CAD today.
This USD CAD news update covers the price action, the levels traders are watching, and the USD/CAD forecast drivers ahead. Prices reference the Vantage USDCAD CFD as of the stated cut-off. Charts are sourced from TradingView. This is not financial advice.
Key Points
- USDCAD fell from around 1.4130 to below 1.4020 on 14–15 July, then recovered toward 1.4047, as oil jumped on renewed Middle East conflict.
- The Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25% on 15 July, its fifth decision this year, while flagging that persistently high oil prices could still prompt a hike.[1] [2]
- The Federal Reserve held its target range at 3.50%–3.75% on 17 June, and nine of 18 officials now pencil in at least one hike this year.[4] [5]
What the chart is showing
The 15-minute chart used for this analysis covers 9–16 July 2026. USDCAD held a 1.4130–1.4180 range early in the week, then fell sharply on 14 July to an intraday low near 1.4020 on 15 July. Price has since recovered, trading at 1.40474 at the cut-off, up 0.01% on the session.
The 50-period moving average sits at 1.40705 and the 200-period at 1.40432, both read from the TradingView setup used for this analysis. Price sits above the 200-period average but below the 50-period average, which is sloping lower. The RSI (14), based on the TradingView setup used for this analysis, reads 59.36, above its 50.12 average, reflecting the bounce off the mid-week low without flagging overbought conditions.

What’s driving USDCAD today
Oil remains the dominant near-term catalyst
Oil remained elevated after reaching a one-month high near $80 a barrel on 15 July, as renewed US strikes on Iranian assets and a fresh naval blockade near the Strait of Hormuz kept supply concerns in play, even as prices eased modestly after the Bank of Canada’s decision.[6] Canada is a major oil exporter, so firmer crude has historically coincided with a stronger Canadian dollar, and the mid-week decline lined up with that move. The oil-loonie relationship is one reason USDCAD reacts quickly to Middle East headlines.
Monetary policy: the rate gap holds the range
The Bank of Canada left its rate at 2.25% on 15 July, citing improvement in Canada’s economy alongside global prospects “dented by higher oil prices.”[1] Governor Tiff Macklem framed persistently higher oil prices as an upside inflation risk that could eventually require tighter policy if sustained, while stressing this remains a risk rather than the base case.[3] The Fed held 3.50%–3.75% at Chair Kevin Warsh’s first meeting on 17 June, with nine of 18 officials pencilling in a hike this year.[4] [5] That leaves a rate gap of roughly 125 to 150 basis points, an important medium-term driver for USD/CAD.
Trade policy: USMCA still unresolved
The USMCA’s six-year joint review opened on 1 July 2026, and the US side said it “did not agree to renew the USMCA in its current form,” though the deal stays in force while talks continue.[7] Canada supports renewal. That uncertainty is one reason RBC Capital Markets’ cad to usd forecast sees only a gradual decline, not a straight line lower.[8]
Levels to watch
The table below covers the levels shaping the near-term USD CAD forecast on USDCAD. These are reference levels, not trade signals.
| Pair | Support | Resistance | What’s happening |
| USDCAD | 1.4020 | 1.4070 / 1.4130 | Recovering from mid-week low, oil-driven |
A break below 1.4020 would put the pair back near its weekly low. A sustained break above the 50-period moving average near 1.4070 would expose the 1.4130 resistance area, last week’s range floor.
What to watch this week and beyond
– Next Bank of Canada decision, 2 September 2026: The Bank said it is “prepared to adjust monetary policy as needed”; its 15 July Monetary Policy Report is the reference point until then.
– Next FOMC meeting, 28–29 July 2026: The first decision since June’s hawkish dot plot; any shift in tone could reshape the usd to cad forecast into August.
– USMCA negotiations, week of 20 July 2026: A further US-Mexico round focuses on outstanding issues; Canada’s bilateral talks with the US remain unresolved as of the cut-off.
– Oil supply headlines, ongoing: Any easing or escalation near the Strait of Hormuz remains the likeliest trigger for sharp intraday volatility.
On risk management: USDCAD has moved more than 100 pips within single sessions this week, above its recent average range. Market participants often monitor Stop Loss placement relative to the 1.4020 and 1.4070 zones above, since fast moves through either level have coincided with wider ranges.
Leverage in forex CFDs amplifies gains and losses equally. Traders holding correlated oil-linked or USD positions may wish to review position sizing ahead of the 28–29 July FOMC meeting. For more on how the pair behaves, see this guide to trading USD/CAD, or explore Vantage’s forex trading offering.
References
[1] “Bank of Canada maintains the policy rate at 2¼% – Bank of Canada” https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/07/fad-press-release-2026-07-15/ Accessed on 16 July 2026.
[2] “Bank of Canada holds key interest rate at 2.25% as economic growth rebounds – CBC News” https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/bank-of-canada-interest-july-2026-9.7270689 Accessed on 16 July 2026.
[3] “Bank of Canada holds rates at 2.25% as Iran war risks future hikes – Global News” https://globalnews.ca/news/11966500/bank-of-canada-rate-decision-july-2026/ Accessed on 16 July 2026.
[4] “Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement – Federal Reserve” https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20260617a.htm Accessed on 16 July 2026.
[5] “Fed interest rate decision June 2026: Fed holds rates steady – CNBC” https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/17/fed-interest-rate-decision-june-2026.html Accessed on 16 July 2026.
[6] “Crude Oil – Price – Chart – Historical Data – News – Trading Economics” https://tradingeconomics.com/commodity/crude-oil Accessed on 16 July 2026.
[7] “Ambassador Greer Issues Statement on the USMCA Joint Review – Office of the United States Trade Representative” https://ustr.gov/about/policy-offices/press-office/press-releases/2026/july/ambassador-greer-issues-statement-usmca-joint-review Accessed on 16 July 2026.
[8] “Currency Report Card: Weaker CHF forecasts; Broader views intact – RBC Capital Markets” https://www.rbccm.com/assets/rbccm/docs/fx/currency-report-card.pdf Accessed on 16 July 2026.
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The information has been prepared as of the date published and is subject to change thereafter. The information is provided for educational purposes only and doesn't take into account your personal objectives, financial circumstances, or needs. It does not constitute investment advice. We encourage you to seek independent advice if necessary. The information has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research. No representation or warranty is given as to the accuracy or completeness of any information contained within. This material may contain historical or past performance figures and should not be relied on. Furthermore estimates, forward-looking statements, and forecasts cannot be guaranteed. The information on this site and the products and services offered are not intended for distribution to any person in any country or jurisdiction where such distribution or use would be contrary to local law or regulation.