Will Yuan Replace U.S. Dollar and Make Gold Shine?

 | May 05, 2019 01:04AM ET

“The US dollar will collapse or it will be replaced by another currency” – we hear such statements all the time. Are they true? We decided to check these claims – so we invite you to read today’s article about the US dollar’s international supremacy and find out whether the greenback’s demise is likely in the foreseeable future. Let’s also draw implications from the analysis for the precious metals market.

We have heard about the fall of the US dollar’s significance for over half a century. In particular, the rise of China’s economy threatens the greenback’s dominance. Trump’s unsound fiscal policy and the recent Powell’s dovish turn only reinforce these fears. So, let’s analyze whether such a scenario is likely in the foreseeable future and let’s draw implications for the precious metals market.

The dollar’s supremacy started around 1955 when reserves held in greenback exceeded those held in pound sterling. Since then, the US dollar is a king. To be clear, we do not maintain that greenback is a wonderful currency without problems and better than gold. No, it simply has no competitors among other fiat currencies. It is the king of beggars.

Initially, after the gradual demise of British currency, the only possible alternatives to the greenback were the Japanese yen and the Deutsche Mark, as Japan and Germany noted impressive pace of economic development. However, both economies were much smaller and with less liquid financial market. Moreover, the US army stationed in both countries, which cast a shadow over their currencies. The situation has not improved since then. In the 1990s, Germany struggled with the reunification, while Japan fell into multi-year stagnation after the burst of the enormous asset price bubble.

Actually, one may convincingly claim that Japan has not fully recovered yet, as the country still faces deflation, weak banks, adverse demographics, sluggish growth or even periodic bouts of negative growth, and negative interest rates. Indeed, the Bank of Japan is running the most accommodative machine of any central bank that it systematically important. Hence, the yen is not a likely candidate to replace the US dollar.

Many analysts believed that the 21st century will bring some changes, as the ECB launched euro – a new, common currency for several European countries. However, for almost every economist with some knowledge about the international monetary system, it was clear that a project based on a unified monetary policy and heterogeneous fiscal policy (each member of the Eurozone conducts its own policy) could not pose a serious threat to the US dollar. The euro is too fragile, which was revealed by the Great Recession and the sovereign debt crisis. Current problems in Italy are just old shortcomings in a new disguise.

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Last but not least, Germany is also an obstacle for euro to gain in importance. You see, Berlin favors the policy of a balanced budget – for us it is a very sound policy, but it results in the small supply of German Bunds. So, investors prefer to park their funds in the US Treasury market, which is the most liquid market in the world.

If not euro and not yen, so maybe yuan will dethrone the US dollar? This is what many analysts expect, based on China’s economic potential. After all, the IMF included the Chinese renminbi into the SDR basket in October 2016. However, the yuan is not likely to replace the US dollar anytime soon. The main reason is the shallow financial market in China. It still lacks transparency and it is controlled to a large extent by the authorities. Do you remember August 2015, when the People’s Bank of China devalued the currency? I bet you do.

Let’s look at the chart below. The share of the yuan in global currency reserves amounted to 1.8 percent in Q3 2018. It does not look like a great threat for US dollar, does it?

Chart 5: Composition of World’s Total Foreign Currency Reserves from Q1 2010 to Q3 2018 (green line – US dollar, blue line – euro, purple line – pound sterling, orange line – Japanese yen, red line – Chinese yuan)