Could a basket of currencies and gold replace the US Dollar as the primary reserve currency globally? That’s a question that’s been batted around for a while, usually amongst fringe naysayers and ranting leaders of Venezuela and middle east regions. However, I read with interest this article from the Independent UK that rival countries were looking to supplant the US Dollar as the currency for oil trading, which would have obvious implications for the standing of the American currency as the reserve currency of choice worldwide. How goes oil currency, so goes the global reserve currency is the thinking. According to the article, there was a secret meeting between the central banks of Brazil, France, China, Russia, Japan and several OPEC states where they were plotting to replace the denomination of US dollars with a basket of other currencies and gold. While there was speculation that the recent rise in gold was correlated with the meeting, it may not be prudent to jump on the gold bandwagon just yet (see other metals ETFs that may benefit from a weakening dollar more so than gold). As unlikely as it seems, never say never. Recall that the British Pound was the global reserve currency for quite some time until the US dollar finally replaced it following World War II. Note however, that the US was surpassing Great Britain as the world’s financial and military superpower well before that. Seeing a switch from one reserve currency to another doesn’t happen overnight – but it does happen. It’s evident that the US is losing is dominance in everything from military might to trade, but experts say even if a switch is under way, this is a decades-long process, not something we’d see occur within a matter of mere years. Why are Countries Fed up with the US Dollar? There are some rather complex implications of an ever-weakening dollar, such as, oil-rich countries are seeing rampant inflation because while they get paid in US dollars for oil, they tend to import much of their goods and services from the EU region. Since the US Dollar has been tanking against the Euro and other currencies, these US dollars tend to be worth less and hence, have much less buying power, stoking inflation. (see full list of all currency ETFs to exploit this weak dollar trend). Similar effects are felt elsewhere, namely China and other large exporters to the US. As they are paid in dollars, an ever-declining currency, their income is artificially decreasing over time as well as the Treasuries they’re buying to satiate our debt. How long these countries will continue to see their investments plummet while sitting idly by is anyone’s guess. But, with the US taking on unprecedented debt with bailouts and stimulus plans while mulling over another massive entitlement in “health care reform” – another Trillion dollar boondoggle, things aren’t looking good for the dollar. What Would
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Could the US Dollar be Replaced as the World’s Reserve Currency? What it Would Mean
