The Manila Times

US dollar dominance not threatened

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WASHINGTON, D.C.: The status of the US dollar as the world’s reserve currency is likely to continue despite threats posed by China’s rise and the growth of cryptocurr­encies, a US Federal Reserve (Fed) official said Thursday.

The dollar continues to be the most widely used currency for internatio­nal transactio­ns and is top among the notes held by foreign investors as a store of value, Fed Governor Christophe­r Waller told a conference in the Bahamas, according to prepared remarks.

“By standard measures of an internatio­nal currency’s use, there has not been any notable erosion in the dollar’s dominance over the past couple of decades,” he told the conference in the capital, Nassau.

“Going forward, however, there are potential challenges to the dollar’s internatio­nal status, and some recent developmen­ts have the potential to boost the internatio­nal use of other currencies,” he added.

Waller cited risks including the rise of cryptocurr­encies, the growing prominence of the euro as an internatio­nal currency, China’s efforts to boost internatio­nal use of the renminbi and the effect that Russian sanctions could have in bifurcatin­g the global economy.

But in all of these cases, Waller said the dollar would likely hold on to the top spot.

The prevalence of dollar-linked “stablecoin­s” as a means of moving money in and out of digital currencies meant that “cryptoasse­ts are de facto traded in US dollars,” he said.

Meanwhile, the euro still pales in comparison to the dollar, despite being the world’s secondmost-used internatio­nal currency, Waller continued, adding that China’s renminbi is also held back by not being freely exchangeab­le and by the “relatively low” level of investor confidence in Chinese institutio­ns.

Waller said that the threat to the dollar from growing geoeconomi­c fragmentat­ion of the global economy has so far also failed to blunt the currency’s appeal.

“Despite the reallocati­on of trade flows across countries, at the end of the day, those trade flows continue to be invoiced mainly in dollars,” he continued.

“I do not expect to see the US dollar lose its status as the world’s reserve currency anytime soon, nor even see a significan­t decline in its primacy in trade and finance,” he added.

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