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Are we heading for a multi-currency world?

Are we heading for a multi-currency world?

Business Times13 hours ago

IF EVER there were a country that needed to borrow at preferential interest rates, it is the US with its mounting debts, ageing demographics and evaporating fiscal discipline. If ever there were a country deliberately undermining the reserve currency status that keeps its borrowing costs low, it is the US with its selfish trade agenda, overreaching sanctions and poisonous politics.
With China unwilling to take the steps required for the renminbi to replace the US dollar and Europe unable to do what needs to be done on behalf of the euro, the global financial system looks set for a slow unravelling. This will take a long time, but the current trajectory looks headed to a multi-currency world without a global lender of last resort and few certain places to hide in a crisis.
A long and slow unravelling
For all the debate on the US dollar's decline, of course, it still accounts for 57 per cent of the global reserves, 54 per cent of export invoicing and 88 per cent of foreign exchange transactions.
As long as commodity derivatives are mainly priced in US dollars and Hollywood crooks still measure their loot in America's currency, there is a long way to go before the dollar's dominance fades. But investors should start to imagine a world in which the US dollar, renminbi and euro coexist with more equal reach.
I have made my own contributions to a vast literature of angst and woe around America's self-destructive behaviour and the risks ahead. But a shrewd analysis by my former Treasury colleagues Charles Collyns and Michael Klein confirms the angst in numbers.
They examine 10 events since the late 1990s, when a spike in policy uncertainty led to a flight to safety that strengthened the US dollar against other currencies. They find, however, that in two recent such moments, both coinciding with the start of President Donald Trump's two terms, the opposite is true.
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You may scoff that it is only two data points, but it is enough to wonder if that blood-curdling sell-off in stocks, bonds and the US dollar that followed 'Liberation Day' was an aberration. Trump wrote it off as market 'yips'. Collyns and Klein suggest that the 'dollar smile', a market phenomenon in which the US dollar strengthens in both good times and bad, may be turning into a frown. Stay tuned.
Searching for alternatives
Meanwhile, consider two other currencies that have actual plans in place to extend their reach for both economic and geopolitical purposes.
China has been deliberately boosting the internationalisation of its currency. The Belt and Road Initiative builds infrastructure with loans denominated in renminbi, while a network of currency swap lines helps prime the pump for Chinese currency flows globally. The digital renminbi is at the forefront of modernising payment systems that will surely fuel adoption overseas.
But even as the largest trading partner for 120 countries, China cannot expect broad use of its currency as long as it is not freely convertible. And even if President Xi Jinping or his successors take this bold step someday, the absence of independent regulators in a single-party system means that anyone holding renminbi will wonder when the rules might change again.
If China may be unwilling to take the required steps to make its currency convertible, Europe looks unable.
Last month, European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde outlined the concrete steps ahead for the euro to become a more reliable global currency that would reduce Europe's borrowing rates, insulate European businesses from exchange rate volatility, and reduce the continent's geopolitical dependence on an increasingly unpredictable America.
The problem is that many of her steps depend on some magical thinking about domestic politics in places like France, Germany and Italy. 'A steadfast commitment to open trade' and 'deeper and more liquid capital markets' look well within reach. But 'underpinning (trade) with security capabilities' and 'uniting politically so that we can resist external pressures' sound far-fetched at best.
All this means we may be headed for a much more confusing monetary world. Helene Rey of the London Business School makes her own case for the euro, but also reminds us of the theory of hegemonic stability advanced in Charles Kindleberger's study of the Great Depression. An open and stable international system, in this view, depends on a single great power.
Imagine a crisis in which no single central bank can restore liquidity and confidence to markets. Worse, imagine if two or three central banks try to secure leverage by making their liquidity conditional. Or perhaps they just miscalculate and miscommunicate, leaving investors scurrying for hiding places in cryptocurrency and precious metals.
We may still be a long way from such a world, but the closer we approach, the rougher the ride will be. OMFIF
The writer is managing partner of Arbroath Group and writes the Leading Thoughts column on Substack.
This article was first published by the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum

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