The US dollar's global standing as the top reserve currency has lost ground to China's yuan and others, says IMF

xizhimen

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The US dollar's global standing as the top reserve currency has lost ground to China's yuan and others, says IMF​

March. 25 2022
Phil Rosen

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A dollar bill viewed through a kaleidoscope. Getty Images
  • The IMF says the dollar has lost ground in its share of international currency reserves.
  • The dollar's dominance has been dented due to central banks looking to diversify their holdings.
  • China has pushed for greater adoption of the yuan, and recently held talks with Saudi Arabia for a yuan-based oil deal.
The dollar share of international reserves has been in decline over the past two decades as central banks look to diversify their holdings into the Chinese yuan and other currencies, according to a new report by the International Monetary Fund.

The dent in the dollar's dominance, though, is not a consequence of fluctuations in exchange rates or interest rates, but instead it can be chalked up to the moves of other nations' central banks.

The IMF noted that the dollar has been steadily offset as reserve managers primarily move into two alternative directions, with a quarter turning to the yuan and three-quarters exploring non-traditional currencies from nations that typically play limited roles as reserve assets.

"A characterization of the evolution of the international reserve system in the last 20 years is thus as ongoing movement away from the dollar, a recent if still modest rise in the role of the renminbi, and changes in market liquidity, relative returns and reserve management enhancing the attractions of nontraditional reserve currencies," the IMF report said.

China has pushed for greater yuan adoption across Africa, and its recent talks with Saudi Arabia for a yuan-based oil deal have signaled that nations are at least thinking about some alternative or counterweight to the US dollar, economist Aleksandar Tomic previously told Insider.

"While any deal would be symbolic, the Chinese are not alone in the search for a non-dollar reserve currency," Tomic said. "Other countries' need for dollars exposes them to the US financial sector, and consequently gives the US political leverage."

For China to continue pushing the yuan to take on a greater share of the global reserve currency, Tomic said it would have to prove the yuan's long-term stability to win the trust of other nations.

 

xizhimen

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This Ukraine crisis will only facilitate this ongoing process.
 

RogerRanger

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Only the English pound has the price stability to replace the dollar. The Chinese/Russian/Japanese currencies are worthless, the Euro isn't traded enough and it is too young a currency. Only the English pound could be the reserve currency. Of course nobody understands what a reserve is, and why the dollar become the reserve after the Americans worked to bankrupt Britain in WW1 and WW2, and the British handed it over. Then the Americans attacked the British economy in the 50's. China will never have the reserve currency unless it re-floats a new currency with more value and stability.

Which I expect is for there to be 3-4 regional currencies to replace the dollar in different parts of the world, rather than a global reserve.
 

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