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FIRST READING: Analysts predict loonie to rally in case of Conservative win

by Sarkiya Ranen
in Health
FIRST READING: Analysts predict loonie to rally in case of Conservative win
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First Reading is a Canadian politics newsletter that throughout the 2025 election will be a daily digest of campaign goings-on, all curated by the National Post’s own Tristin Hopper. To get an early version sent directly to your inbox, sign up here.

TOP STORY

If the Conservatives win the April 28 election, expect an immediate surge in the value of the Canadian dollar, according to a

new foreign exchange analysis by the Dutch financial firm ING

.

However, the report concludes that such a thing is unlikely, and that world financial markets are already planning for the lower Canadian dollar that would be yielded under another four-year Liberal term.

“A Conservative win would be a surprise for markets, and we think (the Canadian dollar) would rally on the view that (U.S. President Donald) Trump may be more lenient in trade negotiations towards another conservative leader,” reads the report, published Tuesday by a team of ING analysts based in London and New York City.

The report notes that both the Conservatives and the Liberals have similar strategies for dealing with Trump, writing “all Canadian parties are firmly condemning U.S. tariffs: Trump is a deeply unpopular figure in Canada.”

Nevertheless, they still conclude that a Conservative win, however unlikely, would be greeted positively by investors as a signal for an “earlier de-escalation in Canada-U.S. trade tensions.”

Although the report briefly touches on the two parties’ differing approaches to taxes, deficit spending and military preparedness, it highlights the U.S. trade war as the most immediate threat to Canada’s economic situation, as “even a modest drop in exports to the U.S.” could plunge the country into recession.

“Whoever wins the elections, the challenges ahead for the Canadian economy are huge,” it reads. Layoffs are poised to increase, and given Canada’s

extremely high rates of personal debt

, they write that this “could exacerbate the pain and lead to an even steeper slowdown in spending.”

The Canadian dollar is currently trading at 72 cents of a U.S. dollar; one of the lowest it’s been over the last 20 years. As recently as 2021, a Canadian dollar could buy 82 U.S. cents. In 2013, the currencies were briefly at par.

  • Bettors strongly back Conservative win, despite a Liberal polling lead
  • Ontario must pay for surgery to give trans resident both penis and vagina: appeal court

Prior to Trump’s election, the long-term assumption among investors was that Canada’s next government would be Conservative. But based on aggregated polls and bookmakers’ odds, ING is now citing an “85-95 per cent probability of Liberals winning.”

“We can safely assume the market’s baseline scenario is a majority win by the Liberals,” reads the ING report.

ING was not the only foreign financial analyst this week to weigh in on the likely impact of the Canadian election.

A Thursday report by the U.K.-based AXA Investment Managers also concluded that a Liberal win was most likely, but that “the direction of fiscal policy looks set to be relatively similar regardless of which of the main parties enter government.”

And whoever wins, AXA said that the next government is set to face “a deteriorating economic environment.”

Not only is Canada poised to suffer from the fiscal uncertainty imposed by the U.S. trade war, but the U.S. is itself

lurching towards recession

as a result of Trump’s tariff policies, with knock-on effects for Canada.

Wrote AXA, “we see a direct hit of around 1 per cent to Canadian GDP and a further 0.5 per cent hit from weaker U.S. growth.”

One of AXA’s only positive notes was that Canada’s debt burden isn’t quite as bad as everyone else’s — at least at the federal level.

When you tally up combined provincial and federal debt, Canada’s “general government” debt ratio is among the h

ighest in the developed world

at 107 per cent of GDP.

However, the $1.4 trillion in federal debt currently held by the Government of Canada works out

to about 42 per cent

of GDP, well below the G7 average. “The Canadian government starts from a place of relative stability enabling it to borrow more without spooking capital markets,” AXA wrote.

 

 Polling has been bananas throughout this entire election, but the above, from Innovative Research, is the most favourable to the Conservatives heading into the final week of the election. Their final election poll had a 38/38 tie between the Liberals and Conservatives. All the other pollsters were charting a three to five per cent Liberal lead.

LAST APPEARANCES

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has conspicuously avoided sitdown interviews with mainstream outlets throughout the campaign, preferring independent outlets. On Wednesday, Poilievre and his wife Ana were

interviewed by conservative YouTuber Jasmin Laine

, and it was heavier than usual on Poilievre’s central philosophy that he wants to stay out of people’s business. “If I was starting a political party from scratch I would call it the ‘mind your own damn business party’ … I don’t want to run your life, I want to run a government,” he said.

Meanwhile, Liberal Leader Mark Carney served poutine at a Quebec fast food outlet, where he compared the appearance to a McDonalds campaign stop made by U.S. President Donald Trump last year. “I’m a bit like Trump. Trump at McDonald’s,” said Carney. When a reporter asked him what sound the cheese made, he said “squish, squish” … which is the wrong answer. Cheese curds are supposed to squeak.

 Above is from a website run by the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA) where they asked all the major parties four questions related to Judaism, mostly on what they would do about the skyrocketing rates of attacks against Canadian Jewish sites. The NDP has answered CIJA questionnaires in prior elections, but not this time. What the NDP did have time for was for hundreds of their candidates to endorse a platform sent around by Palestinian Youth Movement, a group that is repeatedly on record as celebrating Palestinian terrorism.

Get all of these insights and more into your inbox by signing up for the First Reading newsletter here.



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Tags: AnalystsCaseConservativelooniePredictRallyReadingWin
Sarkiya Ranen

Sarkiya Ranen

I am an editor for Ny Journals, focusing on business and entrepreneurship. I love uncovering emerging trends and crafting stories that inspire and inform readers about innovative ventures and industry insights.

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