Canada’s foreign portfolio investment in Canadian securities totalled $6.17 billion in February. This was below the $23.81 billion expected figure.
The data compares the actual February inflow with the market expectation. It indicates a smaller net amount of foreign funds placed into Canadian securities than forecast.
Implications For The Canadian Dollar
The sharp drop in foreign investment for February is a significant bearish signal for the Canadian dollar. We see this as an early warning that international capital is becoming hesitant about Canadian market exposure. This data point, a miss of over $17 billion from expectations, is too large to ignore.
This report puts downward pressure on the loonie, especially as it coincides with a recent slide in WCS oil prices, which have fallen below $70 per barrel from their highs of over $78 in late 2025. Given these twin headwinds, we are looking at USD/CAD call options expiring in the next 60 days. This position benefits if the Canadian dollar continues to weaken against its US counterpart.
Furthermore, this lack of foreign demand reduces the pressure on the Bank of Canada to pursue a hawkish interest rate policy. Last week’s inflation data already showed a slight cooling to 2.6%, giving the central bank room to pause. We believe derivatives tied to the CORRA, which are pricing in a lower probability of a summer rate hike, present a viable opportunity.
For equity traders, the S&P/TSX Composite appears vulnerable without the support of robust foreign inflows, a pattern we also observed in mid-2024 before a market correction. Key sectors like financials and energy, which are heavily weighted in the index, are particularly exposed to waning international confidence. We are considering buying put options on Canadian stock market ETFs as a hedge against a potential decline in the coming weeks.