Cape Times

The dollar still rules the roost globally

- Mark Gilbert Mark Gilbert is a Bloomberg columnist.

THE CURRENCY wars are still rumbling on. Yesterday, Thailand became at least the 21st country to reduce interest rates so far this year, as everyone tries to make their currency cheaper than everyone else’s.

The Federal Reserve still seems on track to raise rates in June, turbo-charging the dollar. But there is more than one way to win a battle. You can inflict increasing damage on your opponent, which is what most of the world is doing to the US. Or you can gain territory – which is what China is doing as its currency steals more and more of the global market.

The US dollar’s continuing ascent against almost every other currency in the world is capturing all of the attention in the foreign exchange markets. It is on such a tear that even the stock market finally started paying attention on Tuesday, with the Standards & Poor’s 500 index having its worst day in two months.

For US firms, the dollar’s 12-year high against the euro and 20 percent gain against the currencies of its biggest trading partners in the past year threatens to trash exports and crimp overseas earnings. “A stronger dollar is undoubtedl­y a headwind for US exports right now, and it’s a headwind for overall gross domestic product growth,” Jason Furman, the chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, said on Tuesday.

While rumours of the dollar’s demise as the world’s reserve currency of choice have been greatly exaggerate­d, the US has lost some ground. It still has a dominant 62 percent share of global currency reserves, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, though that’s slipped from more than 72 percent in 2001.

In the past year, the dollar’s share of total global financial transactio­ns grew to more than 43 percent from a bit less than 39 percent, according to figures compiled by the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommun­ication, a global network that carries 20 million financial messages per day between 10 800 institutio­ns in more than 200 countries. At the same time, China’s currency became the world’s fifth favourite medium of exchange, up from seventh at the start of 2014. The euro is the real loser on the global stage.

An oddity of the currency war that is quietly being fought in the background is that while everyone favours a weaker currency to boost exports and growth, there’s still prestige in being the most-used unit of exchange. The efforts of various financial centres to win China’s favour and become the leading offshore home for renminbi transactio­ns is well chronicled, and now China itself is promoting its currency as a world beater. Simon Black, who runs the Sovereign Man service advising subscriber­s on second passports and overseas assets, alerted me to this billboard he spotted while travelling in Asia last week.

That billboard, though, is not in China. It is beside the motorway that connects Bangkok with its airport. “China is literally advertisin­g its currency overseas, and it’s making sure that everyone landing at one of the world’s busiest airports sees it,” says Black. “They know that the future belongs to them and they’re flaunting it.”

The yuan still only accounts for 2.06 percent of global transactio­ns, according to Swift. But that’s up from 1.39 percent a year ago as it leapfrogge­d both the Canadian and Australian dollars. And as recently as January 2012, the yuan was the 20th most-used currency, not the fifth. If the US is the loser in the currency wars, China is likely to be the long-term winner.

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