During 2013, for example, the Canadian dollar declined against the euro, the pound and the Swiss franc, but
appreciated against the yen and Australian dollar (see chart above).
Not exact matches
During the three months that ended March 31, 2001, the dollar
appreciated 7.3 percent
against the euro and 10.3 percent
against the Japanese
yen.
During the three months that ended March 31, 2005, the dollar
appreciated approximately 4.5 percent
against both the euro and the
yen.
During the three months that ended March 31, 1999, the dollar
appreciated 8.4 percent
against the Euro and 5.3 percent
against the Japanese
yen.
According to the report, the dollar
appreciated 8.2 percent
against the euro and
appreciated 2 percent
against the Japanese
yen during the three month period that ended September 30, 2000.
During the three months that ended March 31, 2010, the dollar
appreciated 6.1 percent
against the euro and 0.5 percent
against the
yen.
The country's healthy trade surpluses and the Plaza Accord in 1985, which sought to weaken the U.S. dollar
against the
Yen and German Deutsche Mark, caused the
Yen currency to
appreciate against other currencies, which in turn made foreign capital investments relatively inexpensive for Japanese companies.
In particular, the Australian dollar fell to around US63 cents by late August as investors moved out of the currency into the rapidly
appreciating yen; the bilateral rate
against the
yen fell from 82 to 70
yen over the same period.
The won has
appreciated to more than a seven - year high
against the Japanese
yen this month, while rising to a nine - year high versus the euro, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
While the Australian dollar has
appreciated more than some of these other currencies, the additional appreciation is not that large (see Graph 24), and, as noted above, the Australian dollar remains below average levels
against currencies such as the euro and
yen.
Among the latter were a contraction in international demand for electronics and a loss of competitiveness as currencies
appreciated with the US dollar
against the
yen.
The Japanese authorities slowed the very heavy intervention they had been undertaking in earlier months and the
yen appreciated by as much as 8 per cent to 108
against the US dollar between end August and late October — its highest level for nearly three years — before weakening a little.
Example: Canadian dollar might
appreciate against the Pound but depreciate
against the
Yen etc..
For a Canadian investor the Japanese ADR
appreciated by 38.89 %, which is exactly the amount by which the
Yen appreciated against the CAD (1/0.72).
For example, if the U.S. dollar
appreciates against the Japanese
yen, the real return to a U.S. dollar - based investor will be less than the return to a
yen - based investor because of the stronger dollar.
The Canadian Dollar has been
appreciating against the Japanese
Yen after the pair reverse from the lower boundary of a dominant ascending channel May 8.
Yen has
appreciated 38.89 %
against the CAD.
So here's how it works out for a Canadian investor:
Yen has
appreciated 11 %
against the USD.
We expect that the currencies of economies with relatively strong growth, where policy is likely to be tightened over the short term, should
appreciate against the currencies of the G - 3 (U.S. dollar, euro and Japanese
yen), where monetary policy is likely to remain loose over an extended period.»