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First post since January 2021: His mug shot.
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Last post on 8 January 2021.
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Aug 24, 2023, 6:42 PM MYT
An international movement against the dollar’s global dominance, spearheaded by nations including China and Russia, has suffered a setback with the greenback’s share of worldwide payments hitting a record high.
Data from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, also known as SWIFT, showed an unprecedented 46% of foreign-exchange payments via the communications system involved the US dollar in July, per Bloomberg.
SWIFT was launched in 1973 to serve as a neutral platform for banks to chat about financial transfers, transactions, and trades. The service links more than 11,000 financial institutions in more than 200 countries and territories.
Other popular currencies in July included the euro, pound, yen, and yuan. The Chinese currency broke records too, with more than 3% of messages using SWIFT relating to the yuan. About 13 years ago, it was only 0.03%, Bloomberg reported.
The jump in dollar-based SWIFT payments raises challenges to the movement to end the greenback’s supermacy of global payments and fund transfers.
Countries including China, Russia, and India have been active in the anti-dollar drive following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine – especially after several Russian banks were kicked out of SWIFT as part of Western sanctions.
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Aug 24, 2023, 11:24 PM MYT
The Chinese yuan’s gradual rise in global finance is pulling down other top currencies but not the dollar, according to ING, despite Beijing’s desire to challenge the greenback’s dominance.
China’s bilateral swap lines and cross-border trade agreements have meaningfully boosted the yuan’s position. Where once it accounted for just 0.03% of global payment flows in 2010, July saw that figure exceed 3%, SWIFT payments data shows.
The yuan’s gains appear to be coming at the expense of other currencies, like the British pound, an ING report from last week noted.
“Despite some pressure, the USD remains the preferential currency for trade. A greater role of BRICS and other emerging markets in global trade may create more natural demand for alternatives to USD, but this has not happened so far. The higher share of CNY in trade invoicing doesn’t seem to be dethroning USD, but rather pushing out second tier developed market FX, such as GBP,” it said.
For its part, the dollar’s share of SWIFT transactions is holding relatively steady, accounting for 46.5% in July and 42% in the first half of 2023. That’s compared to 41% in 2022 and 44% in 2015.
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The recent SWIFT data confirms the dollar’s strength, even as it faces deeper de-dollarization efforts and growing anti-greenback rhetoric from the BRICS bloc of emerging markets.
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On Thursday, BRICS leaders also publicized plans to expand the membership to include other nations. A larger coalition would not have an overwhelming impact on de-dollarization, ING wrote, though it could accelerate the creation of finance systems outside of the dollar’s hegemony.
As an example, China has been steadily building an alternative to the Western-dominated SWIFT system, with the Cross-border International Payments System, or CIPS. Cut off from US regulation, it now has 91 direct participants.
Still the West’s financial messaging and clearing systems account for 40 times more transactions than China’s CIPS, according to ING.
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