From
the comments section:
“Uncle
Sam tried to destroy Russian economy. The victim is the US Dollar and
European business. The Russian bear is too big!”
Unintended
consequences: Sanctions on Russia hurt US dollar dominance
The
US dollar, the dominant global currency since 1944, may lose some of
its luster due to the American-led sanctions against Russia over the
turmoil in Ukraine. The greenback has been fading in favor since the
global financial crisis in 2008.
RT,
6
August 2014
The
US-led sanctions against Russia may have backfired on the US because
it threatens to “hasten a move away from
the dollar that’s been stirring since the global financial crisis
[in 2008],” Rachel
Evans at Bloomberg wrote.
In an unexpected turn of events, Hong Kong’s central bank has
bought more than $9.5 billion since the start of July “to
prevent its currency from rallying as the sanctions stoked
speculation of an influx of Russian cash,” she
noted.
“OAO
MegaFon, Russia’s second-largest wireless operator, shifted some
cash holdings into the city’s dollar,” according
to Bloomberg. “Trading
of the Chinese yuan versus the Russian ruble rose to the highest on
July 31 since the end of 2010, according to the Moscow Exchange.”
In
March, after Crimea voted to secede from Ukraine and join Russia,
the US and European
Unionimposed
visa restrictions on Russians and Crimeans whom they considered
“most directly involved in destabilizing Ukraine, including the
military intervention in Crimea.” America
and the EU expanded their economic punishment later in the month, as
well as twice in April, once in May and twice in July, according to
Debevoise & Plimpton, an international financial law firm.
In
the latest
round of sanctions,
issued on July 29, the European Union imposed broader sanctions
to“limit
access to EU capital markets for Russian State-owned financial
institutions, impose an embargo on trade in arms, establish an export
ban for dual use goods for military end users and curtail Russian
access to sensitive technologies particularly in the field of the oil
sector.” President
Barack Obama announced the US would also be “blocking
the exports of specific goods and technologies to the Russian energy
sector,” “expanding sanctions to more banks” and “suspending
credit that encourages exports to Russia.”
The
dollar’s dominance has shrunk over the last 13 years, from 72
percent of global currency reserves to 61 percent today, threatening
the position that the greenback held since the Bretton Woods
Conference in July 1944, when delegates from 44 Allied countries met
in New Hampshire to hammer out a way to regulate the international
monetary and financial order after the conclusion of World War II.
Each signatory agreed to adopt a monetary policy that maintained the
exchange rate by tying its national currency to the US dollar and to
prevent competitive devaluation of its money. At the time, the dollar
was pegged to the price of gold. In 1971, President Richard Nixon
took the US off the gold standard, and the American banknote became
the reserve currency around the world.
Certain commodities, like oil,
are priced in US dollars, regardless of the country of origin.
“The
crisis created a rethink of the dollar-denominated world that we live
in,” Joseph
Quinlan, chief market strategist at Bank of America Corp.’s US
Trust, which oversees about $380 billion, told Evans.“This
nasty turn between Russia and the West related to sanctions, that can
be an accelerator toward a more multicurrency world.”
The
wording of the economic penalties may also negatively impact the
greenback’s standing as the world’s reserve currency.
Historically,
US sanctions prohibit companies from using US dollars in the targeted
country (like Iran or Sudan), Frances Coppola wrote in Forbes in
mid-July. But the present sanctions on Russia focus on “US
persons” providing
companies with long-term financing in any currency. Some of the
targeted businesses include those in the energy industry, including
Rosneft and Novatek, and those in the financial industry, like
Gazprombank (the financial arm of gas giant Gazprom) and the Russian
state development bank.
“It
is perhaps not obvious why an energy company would want to borrow in
Euros, since oil and gas are priced in dollars,” Coppola wrote. “But
borrowing in Euros could be a way round the sanctions.”
Banks
could also use derivatives “or
even just basic foreign exchange facilities,” she
added. But with the EU joining in on the sanctions, Euro funding may
be “rather hard to come by.” But, Coppola noted, “It’s
still clever.”
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