Correlation Between Oil, Ruble, And CAD

Published 12/29/2014, 09:50 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

Over the past six months, the Canadian dollar has been the best performing of the major currencies against the US dollar. It has only lost about 8.3% against the greenback.

On the other hand, the Russian ruble is the worst performing of currency. Over the past six months it has lost almost 40% against the dollar.

Chart Displays How well CAD and the ruble tracks the price of oil

This Great Graphic, composed on Bloomberg (above), shows how well the Canadian dollar (yellow line) and the Russian ruble (green line) tracks the price of oil (white line). The prices are not normalized or indexed so the optics might be misleading. We looked at the correlation between oil and these two currencies.

The first issue we looked at was simply direction. When oil prices were lower, what happened to the Canadian dollar and Russian ruble. Over the past 100 days oil prices and the Canadian dollar moved in the same direction almost 95 days. The Russian ruble moved in the same direction as oil prices in 96 of the past 100 sessions.

The second issue we looked at was the correlation of the returns. To do this, we conduct the correlations on the percentage change of the time series. The Russia ruble is very volatile this volatility weakens the correlation of returns. Over the past sixty sessions, the return of the ruble and oil is correlated by about 0.19. Over the past 100 sessions, it is fractionally lower.

In contrast, the returns of the Canadian dollar and oil have been significantly more correlated. Over the past 60 sessions, the correlation of returns is about 0.58, three times more than the ruble/oil correlation. If the sample period is lengthened to 100 sessions, the correlation slips to 0.46, which means more recently the correlation has increased rather than diminish.

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