Destruction of the US dollar

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I posted the link from my phone last night, so I didn't quote or add commentary. The point is that Saudi Arabia is not ever going to tolerate Iran. Their regional difference is real and since both of them want to become BRICS members, it's problematic. Either the BRICS choose one or the other or tell them both to kiss and make up before either gets into the club. Since both nations already have ties of various strength with existing BRICS members, I expect both Iran and Saudi Arabia are going to sit on the BRICS sidelines (as alluded to in the Chinese media story I quoted earlier) until the Sunni/Shia divide - that's been percolating for nearly 1,400 years - gets resolved.
 
I posted the link from my phone last night, so I didn't quote or add commentary. The point is that Saudi Arabia is not ever going to tolerate Iran. Their regional difference is real and since both of them want to become BRICS members, it's problematic. Either the BRICS choose one or the other or tell them both to kiss and make up before either gets into the club. Since both nations already have ties of various strength with existing BRICS members, I expect both Iran and Saudi Arabia are going to sit on the BRICS sidelines (as alluded to in the Chinese media story I quoted earlier) until the Sunni/Shia divide - that's been percolating for nearly 1,400 years - gets resolved.

Sorry bro, that post didn't age well. Mine a few posts up wasn't spot on but the trend of China taking the lead to get everyone in line and playing nice, at least publicly, is pretty clear I think. Multiple sources have already confirmed that Saudis join BRICS in June at the BRICS summit. I assume Iran will also at some point. Whole world is moving away from dollars in unison.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/03/10/arc...ia-agree-to-revive-ties-reopen-embassies.html

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Long-time regional foes Iran and Saudi Arabia agreed to resume diplomatic relations and reopen embassies in each other’s countries following China-led negotiations in Beijing, both governments announced via their respective state media agencies.

“As a result of the talks, Iran and Saudi Arabia agreed to resume diplomatic relations and re-open embassies ... within two months,” Iran’s news agency IRNA reported Friday.

Saudi Arabia’s state Saudi Press Agency confirmed the announcement in its own statement.

The Saudi statement profusely thanked Beijing for its leadership in the talks.

“In response to the noble initiative of His Excellency President Xi Jinping, President of the People’s Republic of China, of China’s support for developing good neighborly relations between the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the Islamic Republic of Iran... The delegations from the two countries held talks during the period 6-10 March 2023 in Beijing,” the SPA statement said.more at link
 
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lol - I was just coming here to post the same article. Surprised the heck out of me to see it this morning. We'll see if it sticks.
 
lol - I was just coming here to post the same article. Surprised the heck out of me to see it this morning. We'll see if it sticks.

All good. Just keep in mind that while muslim countries that historically always opposed each other on ideological grounds making nice seems positive, it also shows a drawing of lines between more oppositional ideologies such as islam vs zionism. But also consider that perhaps the leadership of countries/populations such as Saudi Arabia and Israel aren't necessarily opposed. Their populations are, however.
 
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I think they stopped the bank failures for now but the problem is they did it by creating inflation.

My guess is the fed is not going to cut rates but they are going to be doing stealth QE now that the banks can trade in their low yielding paper for high yielding paper.

This way they can claim they are still fighting inflation since most people focus on the rates not on the balance sheet.

It'll be interesting to watch the balance sheet although they're in so much trouble now that I'm worried they might start faking the balance sheet numbers. Especially when we get close to hitting milestones like 10 trillion on the balance sheet.
 
Holy crap! The fed printed 350billion this week!!! I figured it would go up by maybe 10 billion. They almost undid all the QT that they've been doing for the last year. The balance sheet might hit a new high next week. This is crazy. Get ready for all time high price inflation readings.
 
Saudi Arabia going through the motions to join the BRICS:
... The kingdom's cabinet approved a plan to join the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation as a "dialogue partner," a precursor to being granted full membership, state news agency SPA announced today. ...

https://gata.org/node/22523
 
4A7FB061-74DB-4FF0-A595-68587E72865C.png
 

FedNOW rolls out Saturday and will be broadly "available" this summer. The petrodollar is being overthrown, and it seems as though it's going to happen soon - as in, within months. In the past I wouldn't have been willing to put a time frame on such a thing, but with FedNOW (effectively a CBDC), it seems pretty clear...
 
... The petrodollar is being overthrown, and it seems as though it's going to happen soon - as in, within months. ..

Petrodollar has a few years left in the tank IMO. Saudi process to join BRICS will still take some time. BRICS initiative to create a new currency will be discussed at their meeting in August. It's not going to magically appear overnight.
 
Financial Times said:
... During a visit by Xi Jinping to Moscow last week, Vladimir Putin pledged to adopt the renminbi for "payments between Russia and countries of Asia, Africa, and Latin America," in a bid to displace the dollar. And this comes as Moscow is already increasingly using the renminbi for its swelling trade with China and embracing it in its central bank reserves, to reduce its exposure to "toxic" -- American -- assets.

Does this matter? Until recently, most Western economists would have said "heck, no." After all, it has long been assumed that the closed nature of China's capital account is an impediment to wider use of its currency.

But right now Putin's announcement is packing an unusually emotional punch. One reason is that concerns are afoot that this month's U.S. banking turmoil, inflation, and looming debt ceiling battle is making dollar-based assets less attractive. "The dollar is being debased in order to fund the bank bailouts," Peter Schiff, the libertarian economist, thundered this week, echoing a view widespread on the American right.

Meanwhile, Jim O'Neill, the former Goldman Sachs economist who launched the "Brics" tag (short for the Brazilian, Russian, Indian, and Chinese bloc), published a paper this week arguing that "the dollar plays far too dominant a role in global finance" and calling on emerging markets to cut their risks.

But the other factor sparking unease is that even before Xi's visit to Moscow, the Saudi government announced that it will start invoicing some oil exports to China in renminbi. Separately, France just did its first liquid natural gas sale in RMB and Brazil has embraced the currency for some of its trade with China.

There is absolutely no sign that these token gestures are hurting the greenback right now. Yes, the dollar's proportion of global reserves has sunk from 72% in 1999 to 59%, as central banks increasingly diversify their investment funds and discard currency pegs. And it is also true that the advent of wholesale (bank-to-bank) central bank digital currencies could theoretically accelerate this diversification by making it easier for non-American central banks to deal directly with each other in their own currencies.
...
... some thought-provoking research on trade invoicing published last year by the Centre for Economic Policy Research.

A decade ago, it was widely assumed that another factor underpinning the dollar was the "stickiness" of trade invoicing patterns, as Gita Gopinath, deputy head of the International Monetary Fund, has noted. But the CEPR paper suggests this might now be slowly shifting -- as Chinese trade has expanded in recent years, RMB use has risen too.

So much so, in fact, that it now exceeds euro use for trade invoicing, which is “striking, given China's low degree of capital account openness," the CEPR says. And it argues that "contrary to conventional wisdom, lack of capital account openness may not fully prevent the RMB from playing a stronger role as an international and reserve currency."

After all, it notes, a $200 billion offshore RMB market has already emerged -- and the currency is being used "in invoicing and settling China's foreign trade and payments" and "a global network of clearing and payments."

The net result, the CEPR predicts, is that a "multipolar" currency world could emerge in the coming years, of the sort that O’Neill is now calling for. That would not be as dramatic a switch as Putin or Xi might like to see, or that Washington alarmists fear.

But to my mind it seems a sensible medium-term bet. And even "just" a multipolar pattern could come as a shock to American policymakers, given how much external financing the U.S. needs.

So investors and policymakers alike need to watch the geeky details of trade invoicing in the coming months. Putin's bluster may turn out to be toothless; but it could also be a straw in the wind.

non-paywall:

https://gata.org/node/22529
 
removed 'cuz it was a bit dickish

Hemingway's quote about bankruptcy seems relevant these days.
 
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