“Fedcoin,” Dollar Abandonment May Signal the End of Global Reserve Status

From Birch Gold Group

Dollar Abandonment May Signal the End of Global Reserve Status

It certainly appears that central bank controlled digital currency is gaining even more popularity.

These “Fedcoins,” according to The Economist, “are a new incarnation of money. They promise to make finance work better but also to shift power from individuals to the state, alter geopolitics and change how capital is allocated.”

The same piece also reveals the increased level of support for digital money: “Over 50 monetary authorities, representing the bulk of global GDP, are exploring digital currencies.”

But perhaps more importantly, “Fedcoins” could signal the beginning of an abandonment of the U.S. dollar, as The Economist highlights:

They could alter geopolitics, too, by providing a conduit for cross-border payments and alternatives to the dollar, the world’s reserve currency and a linchpin of American influence.

Right now, the U.S. dollar occupies only 59.02% of the total global currency reserves, according to the International Monetary Fund.

But as the total reserve increased by 3.57% from Q3 to Q42020, the U.S. dollar’s share of that reserve shrunk to an all-time low (and has been steadily dropping since 2016). That means the dollar’s hegemony as global reserve currency is waning.

And that is incredibly important. The dollar’s role as a global reserve currency over the decades has allowed the U.S. to issue a historically-unprecedented amount of debt, and even sustained the dollar’s value against other currencies.

Before we go further, let’s explain exactly what we’re discussing.

What is a global reserve currency?

Investopedia has a terse but useful definition:

Currency maintained by central banks and other major financial institutions to prepare for investments, transactions, and international debt obligations, or to influence their domestic exchange rate. A large percentage of commodities, such as gold and oil, are priced in the reserve currency, causing other countries to hold this currency to pay for these goods.

Here’s what that means:

  1. “Maintained by central banks and other major financial institutions” means a lot of people want to hold dollars.
  2. “Influence their domestic exchange rate” means that some nations actually hold dollars as part of their central bank reserves (the same way they hold gold). Want a stronger local currency? Buy more. Want a weaker currency to make your exports cheaper? Sell dollars.
  3. “A large percentage of commodities” means that anything priced in dollars gets paid for in dollars, no matter where you are.
  4. “Causing other countries to hold this currency” means the U.S. dollar functions as an intermediate currency in international transactions. If a textile mill in Pakistan wants to buy cotton from an Egyptian farm, the deal gets negotiated and paid in U.S. dollars. This reduces exchange rate risk between the two parties and encourages both importers and exporters to have dollars in their banks for future transactions.

Now, these are all very good reasons for global companies, central banks, and virtually everyone to have at least some U.S. dollars.

And where do they get those dollars? The U.S. government’s debt: Treasury bills and notes. There’s been a massive, global demand for dollars for over 60 years. Even better, from the federal government’s point of view, because all these institutions need dollars, they usually roll the debt forward. When their bonds mature they use the proceeds to buy more bonds.

That would be like your credit card company telling you, every month, “Don’t worry about your balance, pay us later.” For years. For decades. In a sense, the U.S. has charged a massive amount it’s really never had to pay off.

As we’ve seen above, though, that global dollar demand is waning. At the worst possible time, too, just when the supply of U.S. dollars is at a record high.

(That’s probably one reason we’ve seen the dollar’s strength vs. other currencies fading over the last few years.)

But that’s not the worst that can happen…

How global reserve currency empires crumble

If the U.S. dollar loses its status as global reserve currency, the economic future for the U.S. isn’t going to look pretty. And history shows us exactly what this process looks like. The same thing happened to the U.K.’s pound sterling after World War I.

Professor Avinash Persaud of Gresham College, a former currency strategist, takes us through this scenario. Quotes below are from his lecture.

Before:

If your currency is a reserve currency, you can pay for things by writing cheques, which nobody cashes. This is exactly what the US has done in recent years. National expenditure has exceeded national income by more than 20% over the last five years.

Writing checks that nobody cashes is shorthand for issuing debt. When the U.S. wants to spend money, there’s a ready market for U.S.-issued IOUs, just like we discussed above.

The U.S. can, in a sense, do what it wants on the global stage. Lots of nations and corporations are anxious of upsetting the U.S. because they can effectively be locked out of global markets. Furthermore, the U.S. can spend as much as it wants.

And that’s great! So long as it lasts forever…

After:

There will be an avalanche of checks coming home to be paid when the dollar begins to lose its status. Of course excessive debt in your own currency is also spelled inflation. [Emphasis added]

We will have to wait and see if that “avalanche of checks” shows up. Regardless, one thing is certain, inflation is rising fast, so it’s possible Professor Persaud may end up being correct.

To make matters worse, certain Fed officials that deal with inflation daily appear to be “running cover” for the fact inflation is starting to heat up.

Wolf Richter identified some of these officials, “such as Fed Vice Chairman Richard Clarida who came out this morning in droves and said they were ‘surprised’ by the red-hot CPI inflation.”

But Wolf also added a key point: “There was nothing to be surprised about.”

We aren’t surprised either. In fact, we’ve been reporting on the potential for rising inflation, and each report seems to get more dire.

Adding fuel to the fire, the dollar’s purchasing power keeps tanking:

At some point, various reports that you can file away in the back of your mind turn into warnings that are hard to ignore.

Maybe it’s time to listen and consider heeding the warning.

Consider doing what central banks do

It might surprise you to learn that central banks have been buying gold in large quantities even as prices were soaring last year:

Indeed, central banks now hold $2 trillion in gold, around 35,000 tonnes, according to Ryan Giannotto, director of research at gold-based ETF GraniteShares.

Do you know why central banks hold gold? Because it’s an internationally-recognized and accepted store of value. Gold is fungible, much easier to transport than other commodities (which is why there was never a “copper standard” or a “cotton standard”), doesn’t go bad in storage, and no one can suddenly decide to make more. Gold in a central bank vault can’t be hacked.

A lot of individuals have taken a cue from central bank attitudes toward gold: “Its status as a safe-haven in times of economic crisis, together with its tendency to profit from a weaker U.S. dollar, has driven investors into the market in droves” writes Saloni Sardana.

So perhaps it’s time to consider doing what the central banks do, and shift a portion of your assets into physical gold (and silver)? Precious metals have been a proven store of wealth for thousands of years. In times of instability, they have been viewed by many as a safe haven, used to preserve wealth and add security to an otherwise uncertain financial future. That’s probably why central banks want to own lots and lots of gold; because it seems like the safest bet when the present looks doubtful and the future looks grim.

With global tensions spiking, thousands of Americans are moving their IRA or 401(k) into an IRA backed by physical gold. Now, thanks to a little-known IRS Tax Law, you can too. Learn how with a free info kit on gold from Birch Gold Group. It reveals how physical precious metals can protect your savings, and how to open a Gold IRA. Click here to get your free Info Kit on Gold.

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11 Comments
Stephanie Shepard
Stephanie Shepard
May 16, 2021 6:02 pm

Fedcoins shows these people are out of touch. People are buying cryptos because the Fed is rapidly devaluing fiat money. Nobody trusts them so they’re cashing out their dollars for more stable assets. The racket is over when people value dog money more than Fed bucks.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stephanie Shepard
May 16, 2021 11:29 pm

It’s a bit more nuanced than that. Equating crypto with dog money or even bitcoin is a bit myopic. Ethereum is a decentralized world computer in which anyone can develop on, based on a foundation of programable currency.
Why would I voluntarily chose to use a centralized monopoly with infinite units possible?
Fedcoin is DOA. The only way it’s adoption will be able to compete on the open market is force.
If an open crypto market was training wheels, to get the masses on board for release of their 1 crypto, they better fuckin hurry.

Stephanie Shepard
Stephanie Shepard
  Anonymous
May 16, 2021 11:49 pm

There’s a difference between equating and simplifying. My comment was aimed at the lack of trust in the fed and less about the entirety of the crypto market. If the cryptos rise in utility to replace fiat money it’ll be because the Fed massively screwed up not because any crypto overtook the Fed itself.

ottomatik
ottomatik
  Stephanie Shepard
May 17, 2021 9:22 am

Fair enough, and spot on.

falconflight
falconflight
May 16, 2021 7:41 pm

I thought the USD would collapse back in 2009/2010, which is why we made alternative provisions in the hope of surviving. Seems to me that global governance could ferret out crypto currency when ever it was deemed an actual danger to their power.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  falconflight
May 16, 2021 11:34 pm

Probably true but yet crypto persists.
They have ALL the gold, so that is off the table.
I am a super fan of Gold and Silver, all pm’s, but honestly decentralized crypto’s seem to be the best ticket off the plantation. And the plantation is gearing up for a digital upgrade that will make escape exponentially more difficult.

brian
brian
  Anonymous
May 17, 2021 10:05 am

IMO, crypto’s persist because the money managers know fiats are going to crash’n burn. Like anything newly arriving that looks to have potential, it draws the sharks first. If the cryptos gain more ground after the sharks then the rule markers enter to change the rules to obviously favour them in raping more wealth from those using the new fiat currencies.

Crypto currencies are not that secure either. You honestly think that a system dreamed up by a person/people, can’t be hacked by other people?? Or that governments ‘security’ organizations won’t trace, control or monitor cryptos?? You think you will be able to cash out your crypto and the tax man won’t be onto the transaction??

The only real danger from PMs is those stupid canoes… I have to pin a note to my canoe… do not transport gold, guns or bullets in this canoe. Suffered several accidents because Ima slow learner…

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 16, 2021 10:23 pm

GOLD. No third party promise to pay. Everything else is just an accident waiting to happen.
Harrington Richardson.

Auntie Kriest
Auntie Kriest
  Anonymous
May 16, 2021 11:52 pm

SIlver too.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Auntie Kriest
May 17, 2021 10:18 am

Platinum.
Catalytic converters are being sawzall’ed out of cars for it now.
Airbag thefts going down , too much labor and technical skill involved.

brian
brian
May 17, 2021 10:14 am

Its not a hidden thing that both Russia and China are working together to bring down the US’s reserve currency status. They know that if they can knock the US off that pedestal then they will knock the US off the global influence throne as well.

With the communist US leadership digging the debt hole faster than at any other time in history it will not be long before the US is the pauper begging with hands held out. When your enemy is in the midst of destroying itself , you do not interfere. Both China and Russia are keeping the pressure on because it only helps speed up the process of destruction.

Get your assets OUT of the money markets and buy better asset protection like PMs. Real estate will be a better purchase after the crash, $100/acre