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US Dollar’s share in global reserves plunges to 30-year low

US Dollar news

The US dollar’s “weaponisation” against countries like Russia and Iran has increasingly fuelled the declining luster of the American currency.

Nations, particularly in emerging markets, are turning to currencies outside the US sphere of political and economic influence, with international institutions like the BRICS bloc promoting this trend.

The US greenback’s share of global currency reserves hit a three-decade low at the end of the third quarter, according to Sputnik’s analysis of International Monetary Fund (IMF) data.

The decline in the American currency’s share of allocated foreign reserves of central banks and governments has continued for the second quarter in succession, losing 0.85 percentage points in July-September, and 1.8 percentage points over the year as financial flows continue the trend of dedollarisation.

US dollar holdings in allocated reserves decreased to 57.39% in the third quarter of 2024, the lowest since 1995.

Central banks are increasingly leaning towards diversification, as the euro’s share rose to 20.02%, while the yen increased to 5.5% during the same period.

The shift out of dollar reserves has been driven by concerns over weaponized US sanctions.

Another contributing factor has been the US federal government’s debt burden, which surpassed the $36 trillion mark amid feckless money-printing by the Federal Reserve.

Geopolitical tensions and fiscally irresponsible military expenditures, such as dollars being poured to NATO’s proxy war in Ukraine, continue to shape global dynamics.

The 16th Summit of the newly expanded BRICS bloc this year highlighted a consensus among its members on the necessity of increasing the use of national currencies in trade, signaling a potential decline in the dollar’s dominance that may fade irreversibly into history.

Image credit: Adam Nir

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2 COMMENTS

  1. If the US Dollar is so imperilled, how come it has gained value (6.0 – 6.a%) against the likes of the Australian and New Zealand currencies since Trump’s election success. …???

    • You are comparing a weak currency (USD) against much weaker currencies (AUD and NZD). By themselves, Australian and NZ currencies have no value in most of the world.

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