(Source: Canada Newswire)

Over inflated Canadian dollar risks hollowing out the country's
manufacturing base
TORONTO, Oct. 27 /CNW/ - The Bank of Canada should look to
intervene at extreme times to keep the value of the loonie stable
and protect Canada's manufacturing base, finds a new report from
CIBC World Markets.
The report argues that by not intervening in the foreign exchange
market when speculators are pushing the dollar to heights it does
not believe are fundamentally sound, the Bank risks a hollowing out
of the country's industrial base.
"Canada could consider what might be called a bounded float,"
says CIBC's Chief Economist Avery Shenfeld in the bank's latest
Economic Insights report. "By intervening only at extremes, the
central bank could help chase away speculative flows that take the
currency, in its considered judgment, beyond fundamentally driven
levels."
Mr. Shenfeld notes that Canada has let markets decide where the
currency should trade since 1998, effectively leaving the
intervention tool to gather dust in the central bank's basement. The
policy of the Bank is not to target the exchange rate, but rather to
take any net stimulus or drag associated with an under- or
overvalued loonie into account in setting interest rates. He adds
that in the current environment, that means leaving interest rates
at rock bottom for longer than would otherwise be the case.
"Anyone who has watched the Canadian dollar's performance in the
last 15 years would have a tough time arguing that foreign exchange
markets are the perfectly rational, calculating machines that the
textbooks suggest," says Mr. Shenfeld. "Clearly, it's not simply
trade flows and commodity prices, but also wildly fluctuating
expectations and the hot money flows they generate, that set the
tone for currency movements. The Bank of Canada admits as much when
it points out the dangers of recent Canadian dollar appreciation."
One of the concerns in not intervening in the rapid appreciation
of the Canadian dollar is that the Canadian economy is made up of
many different sectors that react very differently to changes in
currency values and interest rates. "If one thinks of GDP as simply
an undifferentiated lump of output, then foreign exchange bubbles
would not seem to be too consequential for Canada," adds Mr.
Shenfeld.
"In the current context, the drag on overall growth and inflation
could be largely offset by the Bank of Canada's decision to keep
rates on hold for an extended period.