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The De-Dollarization Fairytale

By Alfonso PeccatielloCurrenciesApr 20, 2023 12:01PM ET
www.investing.com/analysis/the-dedollarization-fairytale-200637408
The De-Dollarization Fairytale
By Alfonso Peccatiello   |  Apr 20, 2023 12:01PM ET
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Brazilian President Lula recently asked the following questions:

- ‘’Every night I ask myself why should every country have to be tied to the US Dollar for trade?’’

- ‘’Why can’t we trade in our own currency?’’

- ‘’Why can’t a BRICS Central Bank have a currency to finance trade between BRICS countries?’’

Lula’s speech sparked yet another mediatic hype on the upcoming De-Dollarization.

So, let’s explain how today’s USD-centric system works and why it’s been impossible to replace in 50+ years.

In a globalized economic system you want to trade with as many partners as possible in a seamless way.

When Brazil exports its commodities to China or Japan and the trade happens in USD, Brazil accumulates Dollars – it might also use them to buy goods or services it needs from other countries.

In other words, today the US Dollar is the Global (Reserve) Currency of choice: over 80% of global FX transactions and 50%+ of global trades and payments happen in US Dollar.

International Role of the U.S. Dollar
International Role of the U.S. Dollar

More importantly, in the last 30 years competitors could not alter this massive USD dominance: why?

Well, it’s because being the US Dollar seems fun from the outside.

But it ain’t easy.

Let’s start from the asset side.

When Brazil exports commodities in USD more than spends USD to import stuff from the outside, the country accumulates USD foreign exchange reserves.

These USDs enter the domestic banking system, and ultimately the local Central Bank is responsible for managing this FX reserve buffer – that means keeping these US Dollars safe and liquid.

In our monetary system, keeping money ‘’safe and liquid’’ means avoiding credit risk and investing in deep and liquid markets that guarantee a painless turnover if necessary (either via selling or repo-ing securities).

The US Treasury market stands out as the global leader in this field: as big as 20+ trillion in size, liquid and underpinned by a deep repo ecosystem it ticks all boxes.

No capital controls, democratic roots and the rule of law reinforce the case.

Most importantly, an ample supply of US Treasuries (read: deficits) provide to the rest of the world what they need: a safe and liquid asset where to recycle the USD proceeds from their global trades.


But so, what’s the potential alternative?

  • Japan? Its government bond market is 60%+ absorbed by the BoJ, and there have been multiple days in a row (!) where no trade happened in the JGBs – how can you store your FX reserves in such an illiquid market?
  • Europe? With such a fragile monetary but non-fiscal union, and the only AAA countries potentially able to provide the world with safe collateral (German Bunds) instead sticking to austerity for decades?
  • China? Brazil? Russia? You are facing a combination of capital controls (China), lack of democracy/rule of law (Russia), corruption and frequent episodes of double-digit inflation (Brazil) – do you want to take these risks when storing your hard-earned FX reserves accumulated from selling your goods and services abroad?

The truth is that US Treasuries don’t have a valid competitor as a global vehicle where to invest FX reserves.

And this is also true for the other side of the coin: debt.

USD-denominated foreign debt is huge, and it makes an orderly De-Dollarization not more than a fairytale.

Bank Loans
Bank Loans

Entities sitting outside the United States have accumulated $12 trillion of USD-denominated debt: this is because to finance global businesses that sell stuff in US Dollars…well, you need US Dollar debt.

I can’t stress how important it is to understand this concept: if you want to break this system and ‘’De-Dollarize’’, you need to deleverage a $12 trillion debt system.

Brazil walking away from USD-denominated trades would hamper its own organic inflows of US Dollars, and Brazilian corporates would be choked under USD scarcity as they need to repay and refinance their USD debt.

When you de-leverage a debt-based system, you are either bidding up the debt denominator (the USD) or you are witnessing tectonic geopolitical events (e.g. wars) where the world order is at stake.

An orderly unwind of the US Dollar is a fairytale: there is no valid alternative for a smooth transition, and de-leveraging the global USD debt based system would be a very painful process.

And this is why you keep hearing about the De-Dollarization, but it never happens.

***

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The De-Dollarization Fairytale
 

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The De-Dollarization Fairytale

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Comments (21)
Adam Teyvz
Adam Teyvz Apr 23, 2023 2:49AM ET
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The reason the US dollar was implemented as the World reserve currency after WW2 is three fold: first the US developed the Marshal Plan to reconstruct Europe and underwrote the debt of the European nations to prevent future conflict in Europe, second thr US WAS and I stress was the manufacturing centre of the world which made the Greenback a necessity for countries to buy goods manufactured in the US, and finally the US was the largest purveyor of financial and energy products which also forced the world to carry the US dollar as reserve currency. In 2023 these factors are no more, China is the manufacturer of the world and Russia and Saudi Arabia are the energy kings. With the shift in the US to and untested Green Economy and the dominace of speculative FANG stocks on the US stock exchange, the US has handicapped its economy by essentially becoming a purveyor of debt and speculation which no one wants. Which means de-dollariazion will happen quickly...
Ac Tektrader
Ac Tektrader Apr 23, 2023 1:05AM ET
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no major country is going to use a currency issued by a set of countries that are ether economic basket cases or authoritarian dictatorships which describes the brics countries.....the lack of rule of law and ignoring market force when valuing this new "currency" makes it a non starter..
Apr 21, 2023 6:33AM ET
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All processes start slowly, and then all of a sudden. This is an ongoing process, it will surely take time but hardly stoppable now.
Mark Gess
Mark Gess Apr 21, 2023 3:28AM ET
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Why do these 'journalists' keep putting out articles stating that all is well with the US dollar, when it is OBVIOUS to anyone paying attention that it is dying a slow and steady death? If you don't think the BRICS nations pose a threat to the US dollar's status as the world's reserve currency, you're either being willfully ignorant, or a complete fool.
David Matulin
David Matulin Apr 21, 2023 3:28AM ET
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I will presume you have been around long enough to understand that this is not first challenge to USD? Although I don't know if I would call what's happening now a "challenge". If USD is dying as you say "slow and steady death" then this has been going (on and off) for last ...at least last 30-40 years now.
Chris Forgione
Chris Forgione Apr 21, 2023 3:28AM ET
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The author is far from a “journalist.” And you, mark, are as entitled to an uninformed opinion as much as the next person. Thise are more plentiful by the moment.
Ac Tektrader
Ac Tektrader Apr 21, 2023 3:28AM ET
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Chris you are the one who is uninformed and apparently ignorant how international trade operates....
David Matulin
David Matulin Apr 21, 2023 2:51AM ET
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As long as US is dominant military power, USD will continue to be safest international trading currency. And that is a good thing as without US military power AND intervention, world trade would quickly fall apart. US has poor leadership in recent years, but no one should doubt resolve, capability and power of US military. Even with poor leadership as they currently have, (which is more preoccupied by feelings and words repurposing), whole (western) world will fall in line when going gets tough and they need support. Every other supposedly "learned" discussion are indeed fairy tales and miss to address key point that's backing US currency and no other currency has that regardless of posturing.
Mahdi Oummih
Mahdi Oummih Apr 21, 2023 1:46AM ET
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the rule of law no longer applies. When the US politicized the US dollar and stole Russia's US dollar reserves, they wrote the death warrant for the USD. It is hard to overstate just how foolish this decision was and economic scholars will likely point back to that one horrible decision and the decision by the US to declare war on Russia in Ukraine as the beginning of the end of US hegemony.
simone scelsa
simone scelsa Apr 21, 2023 1:41AM ET
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"China? Brazil? Russia? You are facing a combination of capital controls (China), lack of democracy/rule of law (Russia), corruption and frequent episodes of double-digit inflation (Brazil)" The main problem is that, right now, the above also apply to the US and the EU.
Sandy Prima
Sandy Prima Apr 21, 2023 1:12AM ET
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hardly possible, but not impossible....
Tuan Pham
Tuan Pham Apr 20, 2023 9:30PM ET
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No is for de-dollarization but yes is weakenning the dollar
Tyrone Jackson
Tyrone Jackson Apr 20, 2023 8:24PM ET
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Euro Pound Yen Aud- Usd just looks like the cleanest fiat on the ground. Just watch it against oil gold and hard assets. It was trading DX 70 and still the world reserve currency. It’s called INFLATION AT 10% Y o Y
 
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