Chief Investment Officer Andy Stout examines whether there’s a chance the US dollar will lose its status as the world’s reserve currency.
There is a lot going on in the markets and with the economy, but with all the economic uncertainty, and with two wars raging abroad, this month I’d like to discuss something that many people are starting to wonder about:
What is the status of the United States’ dollar as the world’s reserve currency?
I’m going to jump right in.
Moody’s, the bond credit rating business of Moody’s Corporation, is the last of the three major credit rating agencies to still give the US an AAA rating, as Fitch, along with Standard & Poor’s, previously lowered the US to AA+.
However, on November 10th, Moody’s placed the US credit rating on a negative watch, indicating it might downgrade the US from the gold standard of creditworthiness.
Consequently, some people have become even more concerned about the US dollar losing its status as the world’s reserve currency. However, our analysis of the data indicates these concerns over the US dollar’s demise are greatly exaggerated. Here are five big questions (and answers) to help explain.
While the concept of a reserve currency can appear complex, it’s nothing more than a currency held by various global central banks and financial institutions. These currencies are not physically stockpiled in vaults, but rather, they are mostly digital accounting entries.
Central banks and financial institutions use these currencies for things such as facilitating international transactions, to stabilize a country’s exchange rate, as an investment, as a way to project global confidence, and as a tool to manage a country’s economy.
The origin of the US dollar’s dominance dates to the end of World War II. Global leaders formed the Bretton Woods Agreement in 1944, pegging the US dollar to gold, and other currencies to the US dollar.
The US government subsequently abolished the gold standard in 1971, resulting in a global move to a floating exchange-rate system.
Despite this change, the US dollar remained the primary reserve currency because of its stability, dominance in global central bank holdings, frequent use in currency transactions, and widespread use in international trade.
These characteristics continue to hold true today. First, the percentage of US dollars held as foreign exchange holdings is near the same level as it was in 1980.
Second, approximately 88% of all currency transactions involve the US dollar, with the Euro a distant second at 31%. (Since there are two currencies involved in a transaction, the sum of individual usage equals 200%.)
In addition, according to SWIFT, the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, about 42% of the transfer of funds involve the US dollar. (SWIFT is a system that allows companies and financial institutions from different countries to exchange payments when conducting transactions.)
Finally, most of the world’s oil conducts trades in US dollars, resulting in constant demand for dollars because everybody needs energy.
Based on today’s data, the Euro would be the most likely replacement. This could be challenging because the member nations of the EU are quite often divided on key political and economic issues.
Another contender is the Chinese Renminbi; however, it falls short today for many reasons, including overly tight controls on currency flows, the exchange rate does not freely float, significantly underdeveloped financial markets, and concerns about the country’s political stability.
Now, a recent challenger has emerged, and that is cryptocurrency. But here, again, there are material drawbacks, as well. First, there’s virtually no regulation (which could be good in some instances), there’s extreme volatility, an uncertainty about which cryptocurrency will win out (Bitcoin, Ethereum, etc.), and, last but not least, a lack of broad acceptance or even understanding about how it actually works or what gives it value.
While nothing would happen overnight, without the built-in demand from being the world’s reserve currency, the US dollar would likely decline in value. To be fair, a weaker dollar by itself is not a terrible outcome because it makes the goods we sell outside of the US less expensive. The flip side is that imports would become more expensive to us.
There would also be less demand for US treasuries from foreigners, which could increase interest rates here in the US, adversely affecting bond prices and possibly stocks as well. The higher cost of borrowing for the government would likely mean less fiscal spending and slower economic growth.
Additionally, many international contracts would have to be renegotiated, causing increased trade uncertainty. Relatedly, global financial stability would become a concern because there are no alternatives as stable and predictable as the US dollar.
Of course, there are many other implications, such as the effect on commodity prices, how banks do business, and ripple effects beyond the economic realm into the geopolitical sphere.
But you get the idea: This is no easy or obvious choice or way to transition away from the US dollar at this time.
Currently, the US dollar dominates the foreign exchange market, global trade, and central bank holdings. Furthermore, as shown above, there isn’t a viable alternative that could replace it. These reasons indicate that the US dollar will retain its status as the world’s reserve currency for quite some time. After all, it took multiple decades for the US dollar to replace the British pound as the world’s reserve currency back in the first half of the 1900s.
But in all likelihood, it probably won’t remain this way forever.
In our estimation, any dethroning of the US dollar would almost certainly have to play out over at least a decade, if not much longer. But when and if it does occur? It would likely happen with the dollar gradually relinquishing control to a group of currencies.
November 17, 2023
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