Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Royal Canadian Mint / Monnaie Royale Canadienne

1 Dollar – Canada

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: Rio 2016 Summer Olympics
Series: Lucky Loonie
Canada
Context
Year: 2016
Issuer: Canada Issuer flag
Currency:
(since 1858)
Total mintage: 3,340,000
Material
Diameter: 26.5 mm
Weight: 6.27 g
Thickness: 1.95 mm
Composition: Steel (Brass-plated Steel)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard2089
Numista: #89178
Value
Exchange value: 1 CAD = $0.73
Inflation-adjusted value: 1.28 CAD

Obverse

Description:
Queen Elizabeth II at 77, facing right, wearing a necklace and earrings.
Inscription:
ELIZABETH II D•G•REGINA

DOLLAR
Translation:
Elizabeth II by the Grace of God Queen
Dollar
Script: Latin
Languages: Latin, English
Engraver: Susan Taylor
Designer: Susanna Blunt

Reverse

Description:
Loon rising from water above the Olympic rings.
Inscription:
CANADA

2016

LUCKY LOONIE

DOLLAR PORTE-BONHEUR

DCW
Script: Latin
Designer: Derek C. Wicks

Edge

Plain


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
20163,340,000

Historical background

In 2016, the Canadian economy and its currency, the Canadian dollar (CAD), were navigating a complex and challenging environment defined primarily by the prolonged slump in global oil prices. Having fallen sharply from over US$100 per barrel in mid-2014 to a low near US$26 in early 2016, the price shock created significant headwinds for Canada's resource-heavy economy. This directly pressured the loonie, which traded at multi-year lows, spending much of the year in a range between 68 and 77 US cents. The currency's weakness was a double-edged sword: it provided a crucial boost to non-energy exporters and the manufacturing sector, particularly in Central Canada, but also increased costs for imports and consumer goods.

Monetary policy from the Bank of Canada (BoC), under Governor Stephen Poloz, was cautiously accommodative in this context. Having cut its key overnight rate twice in 2015 to 0.50% to buffer the oil shock, the BoC held steady throughout 2016. Policymakers balanced concerns over weak business investment and inflationary pressures from the low dollar against growing household debt and a hot housing market, especially in Toronto and Vancouver. The U.S. Federal Reserve's decision to raise interest rates in December 2016, while the BoC remained on hold, further widened the interest rate differential, contributing to the Canadian dollar's relative weakness against its U.S. counterpart.

By year's end, the currency's situation showed tentative signs of stabilization as oil prices recovered to around US$50 per barrel. However, significant uncertainty remained due to volatile commodities, the unfolding economic policies of the newly elected U.S. President Donald Trump, and concerns over Canada's own domestic vulnerabilities. Thus, 2016 was a year where the low Canadian dollar acted as a critical, though imperfect, adjustment mechanism for an economy in transition, shielding it from the worst of the oil crash while presenting new policy challenges for the central bank and federal government.

Series: Lucky Loonie

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1 Dollar reverse
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1 Dollar reverse
1 Dollar
2006
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1 Dollar reverse
1 Dollar
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1 Dollar reverse
1 Dollar
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1 Dollar reverse
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1 Dollar obverse
1 Dollar reverse
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2016
🌱 Very Common