It looks like greenbacks will remain strong against the loonie for a while.  However, I doubt we will see a return to the $1.50 level that we saw in 2001. Anyway, Americans can take advantage of the $1.30 rate now while reminding themselves that it will inevitably go back down one of these days.  Whatever the rate has been over the years, Montreal has always been a relative bargain destination for Americans.
Falling Oil Prices Hurt Canadian Economy:Bank of Canada cuts interest rates again; economy likely shrank in second quarter
July 15, 2015
                wsj.com
              OTTAWA–Canada’s central bank cut interest rates for the second  time in six months, highlighting how severely the oil-price collapse is  crimping growth in one of the world’s most energy-dependent advanced  economies.
 The Bank of Canada l
owered its benchmark overnight interest rate  by .25 percentage points to 0.50% on Wednesday, citing a  deeper-than-expected impact of the decline in oil prices and a sluggish  recovery in non-energy exports. 
 The move, which comes as the  U.S. Federal Reserve is signaling its commitment to raising rates, is a  sign of how lower commodity prices stand to reshape such  resource-reliant economies from Canada to Norway and Russia. It also  drives homes the risks for those economies of coming to rely too heavily  on the resource sector for their economic growth.
 Bank of Canada Governor  Stephen Poloz  said that, based on the bank’s projection, the economy shrank in the  second quarter after a first quarter decline, marking two negative  quarters of growth. He said he wouldn’t refer to the downturn as a  recession, because that will require more data, time and analysis.
 While  the U.S. and most other Group of Seven countries stand to benefit from  low oil prices because they consume more energy than they sell, Canada  is a net energy exporter and relies heavily on the sector, which makes  up about 10% of its GDP.
 Uncertainty 
in Greece and 
slowing economic growth in  China have dragged down prices for everything from oil and coal to iron  ore and gold. Oil prices, roughly half of what they were last year, are  set to fall even further following this week’s deal to lift sanctions  on Iran.
 The declines have sent ripples through economies that depend heavily on natural resources...
 Wednesday’s  rate announcement, which sent the loonie close to levels last seen  during the 2009 financial crisis, marks the second time the Bank of  Canada has cut its key interest rate this year. The bank surprised  markets in January with a quarter-percentage-point cut to 0.75%, which  it called 
“insurance” against falling oil prices...