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The Canadian dollar on Thursday was on track for ⁠its longest ​daily losing streak since January against its U.S. counterpart as the gap widened between Canadian and U.S. bond yields.

The loonie was trading 0.1% lower at 1.3720 per U.S. dollar, or 72.89 U.S. cents, ​after touching its weakest intraday level since April ‌16 at 1.3737. It was the seventh-straight day of declines for the currency.

“USD-CAD’s push to a four-week high is really a story of relative momentum,” said Kevin Ford, FX & macro strategist at Convera.

“Hotter-than-expected U.S. inflation has kept ‌the market leaning ​toward higher for longer (interest ‌rates) in the U.S., while Canada has had little fresh macro ​this week to push back against last Friday’s ⁠softer labour print.”

The U.S. dollar added to recent gains ⁠against a basket of major currencies after economic data kept expectations intact that the ​Federal Reserve was unlikely to lower interest rates this year.

Canada’s 2-year yield fell 2 basis points further below its U.S. equivalent to a gap of about 105 basis points in favor of the U.S. note, marking the widest spread since ⁠January 22. Investors tend to favor the higher-yielding currency.

Data on Friday showed that Canada’s economy lost 17,700 jobs in April and the unemployment rate rose to a six-month high of 6.9%, indicating continued weakness in a labor market that has struggled in the face of ⁠trade uncertainty. Trade uncertainty has also weighed ​on Canada’s housing market. Home sales posted a modest increase of 0.7% ⁠in April from March after a slow start to the month, and prices edged lower, ‌data from the Canadian Real Estate Association showed on Thursday.

The price of oil, ​one of Canada’s major exports, was trading 0.6% higher at $101.65 a barrel.

Canadian bond yields moved lower across a flatter curve. The 10-year was down 4 basis points at 3.532%, trading around the ​middle of its range since the start of the month.

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