The dollar has weakened. Here’s the reason why this is actually undermining its role as the world’s reserve currency


It does not make much sense for the dollar to be used as widely as it is. Sure, the U.S. economy is the largest in the world, but the dollar is on one side of 88% of all currency trades, despite the US accounting for about a quarter of global gross domestic product. Countries, particularly China and Russia, are also shocked that the US is able to provide its dominant currency to government officials over the entire sanction.

But even if the dollar has fallen 8.5% since March, according to the WSJ dollar index BUXX,
-0.23%,
there is still no clear path or even idea on how to replace the role of the dollar in the global financial system. It was only a year ago that former Gov. of Bank of England Mark Carney suggested that Facebook’s Libra cryptocurrency could be a replacement, an idea that now sounds ridiculous, considering the project’s credibility, even as Carney’s criticism of dollar hegemony proved to be if there was a dollar shortage during the onset of the coronavirus pandemic.

Brad Setser, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, makes another point.

“A weaker dollar is leading to more intervention by countries seeking to protect their exports in the foreign exchange market, and thus more reserve accumulation,” he said in a blog post this week. “A weaker dollar therefore typically results in higher not lower demand for dollars from the world’s reservists.”

And how do these reserve managers collect dollars? By buying US Treasurys, which comes in handy because the US is issuing the debt at a faster rate, as the latest issues of the budget deficit released on Wednesday.

Setser says a number of countries were back in the market in June and July to devalue their currencies – particularly Thailand, Taiwan, Singapore and India.

“Many export-based economies with large external surpluses are ready to drop their currency against the dollar, but they remain reluctant to appreciate their currency against the dollar as the tide turns. And so most of the world’s accumulation of dollar reserves tends to come when the market does not push the dollar up, ‘he writes.

The buzz

Early unemployment fell sharply last week, with state demands totaling 963,000, a decline of 228,000. This is the first time during the pandemic that claims have been below 1 million.

Network equipment and software manufacturer Cisco Systems CSCO,
+ 1.92%
reported a decline in earnings and guidance for soft income for the current quarter, and announced its chief financial officer with retirement.

Conglomerate 3M MMM,
+ 0.53%
said that sales trends improved in July, and manufacturer of luxury products TPR,
+ 0.45%
reported a narrower-than-expected loss.

Apple AAPL,
+ 3.32%
is ready for a series of bundles that allow customers to subscribe to several of the company’s digital services at a lower monthly price, according to a Bloomberg News report.

The US has said that tariffs on European Union products will not continue to change, despite efforts by aircraft maker Airbus to comply with a World Trade Organization decision on state aid. Also on the trade front, a number of U.S. companies have lobbied the White House over the decision to ban the social media app WeChat, according to The Wall Street Journal.

The brands

The S&P 500 SPX,
+ 1.40%
is within touching distance of a closed record high, and US stock futures ES00,
+ 0.08%
YM00,
+ 0.05%
NQ00,
+ 0.58%
turned higher.

Proceeds from the 10-year Treasury TMUBMUSD10Y,
0.668%
rose to 0.69%.

The map

Bank of America took a survey of European credit investors about what worries them. Investment investors were most concerned about negative return debt and the growing Nasdaq COMP,
+ 2.12%,
although high-yield investors are more concerned about the relentless rise in the Nasdaq than anything else. The current depressed ratings of European banking stocks SX7E,
-1.05%
came in third for both sets of investors. The August survey, according to Bank of America, also shows that credit investors have gone ‘alone’, pushing overweights to record highs with a net overweight of 62%. Not only is some investors’ financial repression (central bank action) too hard to fight, supply is set to fall after companies issued debt earlier in the year.

Random reads

Apparently there has been a flood of posts on social media saying that sen. Kamala Harris, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden’s running mate, is ineligible to become president. She is.

Wind and solar energy accounted for a record percentage of electricity in the first half of 2020.

Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, are now California homeowners.

The observatory shown in the James Bond film “Goldeneye” had to be temporarily closed.

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