Dollar tumbles on report of its demise

Gold price at record high as global markets go into a frenzy

By Stephen Foley in New York
Wednesday, 7 October 2009

The price of gold is surging on world markets amid fears that the old economic order based on the supremacy of the US dollar could be breaking down.

A new spike has sent the cost of the precious metal to a level not seen before. The dollar slid sharply after yesterday's report in The Independent that Gulf Arab states are secretly planning to stop trading oil in dollars, and a senior UN official said that the US should be stripped of its position as the main source of currency reserves for other countries.

The developments come on top of speculation that the Obama administration is operating a policy of benign neglect of the dollar, engineering a devaluation that could help repair some of the economic damage caused by the recession.

Not since the collapse of the Bretton Woods system in 1971 has gold been treated as the equivalent of a world currency, but The Independent reported that it could form part of a basket of currencies that would be used for oil trading by the end of the next decade.

Aram Shishmanian, the chief executive of World Gold Council, said: "The financial and economic instability of the past 18 months has brought gold's historical role into sharp focus and has continued to increase its prominence among policy advisers, central banks, and investors around the world.

Across the world, investors have been reaching for gold as an alternative to the dollar and to other US assets, fearing that the American currency is headed inexorably lower.

The dollar index – which measures the greenback against other currencies – fell 0.7 per cent yesterday and the dollar was lower against all major currencies except the British pound.

The US government's debt – which stands at $11.86 trillion (£7.45trn) after tax revenues collapsed with the recession and the Treasury spent billions on propping up the banking system – would be easier to repay if the value of the dollar was lower. Economists noted that the US resisted pressure to include a promise to protect the stability of world currencies in last weekend's communiqué from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), sparking growing concern that the Obama administration could be content to see the currency fall. That would make US exports more competitive and could spark a manufacturing jobs revival.

Overseas governments are in a bind because they hold trillions of dollars as reserves to protect them against a financial crisis. They are seeing the value of those reserves decline, but starting to swap them for gold or other currencies could deluge world markets with unwanted dollars and send the value of the greenback even lower. The situation is particularly sensitive for oil-producing nations, who are paid in dollars for their exports and therefore hold high dollar reserves.

Gulf Arabs have begun planning – with China, Russia, Japan and France – to move from dollar dealings for oil to a basket of currencies including the Japanese yen and Chinese yuan, the euro, gold and a new currency planned for nations in the Gulf Co-operation Council, which includes Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait and Qatar.

Secret meetings have already been held by finance ministers and central bank governors in Russia, China, Japan and Brazil to work on the scheme, which will mean oil will no longer be priced in dollars. The revelation was met with public denials yesterday. The Saudi central bank governor, Muhammad al-Jasser, said: "The future is in God's hands. Today, the conditions are good for the arrangement we have." The Japanese Finance Minister, Hirohisa Fujii, said he "doesn't know anything about it".

Dennis Gartman, the US investment guru who writes the daily Gartman Letter, said that no one should be surprised to hear denials. "We are certain that spokespeople for every single nation will be brought to the fore to deny that any such meetings have occurred, that no such decisions have been made, that it is not in anyone's interest to have held such meetings or made such decisions," he told clients as The Independent story broke. "The market will care not a whit."

Simon Johnson, the IMF's former chief economist, said the countries involved would calculate that it was not in their interests to drive the dollar down by eroding its position as the currency of international commodities trading and central bank reserves.

"It would only be great news for the US. The US would love a little bit of devaluation, even though they can't say it," he said. "They have to pay lip service to the strong dollar policy, but if someone else were to engineer a devaluation, that would be lucky break for the US."

Source: Independent

The americano currency is in place to take over as G.Bush junior has signed up to it already !

Posted by Spider | 08.10.09, 15:18 GMT

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Prior to the the destruction of another third-world country by the United States (I refer of course to the bombing and invasion of Iraq) - Saddam Hussein was planning to switch from from dollars to euro trading. Naughty boy...

Posted by Derek Blues | 07.10.09, 16:34 GMT

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Iran proposed moving away from trading oil in Dollars over a year ago. As one of the major oil producers it was deemed as a step to undermine Bush and the US economy. But as we know, greedy bankers did all that.

Posted by Paulo | 07.10.09, 16:26 GMT

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Hmm, and what did Gordon Brown do with our gold reserves...that's right, he sold it all overseas...says it all really!

Posted by Andrew | 07.10.09, 15:10 GMT

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World economics are changing, but they have been changing for the past decade, the move away from using the US Dollar for oil trading isn't something new, France had agreements in place to trade with Iraq in Euros just before the US invaded (coincidence?).

I still feel that the UK should maintain Sterling, all I have to do is look at the price of goods across Europe, the UK is by far one of the cheapest countries I have worked in this year comapred with France, Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Finland and Germany.

Now, that may all change, but for the foreseeable future, I personally would still not like to see the UK rush into the Euro, our place in the EU is already strong, with a large Euro vote and vetos in place, the UK can look after itself without losing control of it's own detmination of rates and currency.

Don't forget, a strong currency is not always the best for an economy, weak Sterling is keeping exports alive in the UK, with the Euro, we'd lose this control. JMHO.

Posted by Steven73 | 07.10.09, 15:01 GMT

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w gould - in what way are France "plotting against us"? Unless by "us" you mean "U.S.", of which the UK is not the 51st state, strange as that may seem sometimes. If we had been a proper "partner in eu" as you put it, we'd have joined the Euro years ago and our currency and economy would not be in the pathetic state we find it in today; furthermore, the change which will affect the UK (as you rightly point out) would have been a change for the better.

Posted by Gerry | 07.10.09, 12:31 GMT

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Since the end of WW", the UK has been the closest ally of the USA, and with it, the UK has slowly but surely been turning into a second world country with Americanism, (Multi-Cult, Political Correctness, etc). We should break away from USA/Israel and join the rest.

Posted by jenny | 07.10.09, 12:25 GMT

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Do we us the dollar in the UK, Mr. Gould?

If there is an effect on the UK it is because of Britains own self imposed "poodle and master" relationship with the US, and its outdated Euroscepticism, that is to fault. They have only themselves to blame, not France.

Posted by Bacon | 07.10.09, 11:27 GMT

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so much for france being our partner in eu they are one of the countries plotting against us, because this change will effect uk

Posted by w. gould | 07.10.09, 07:44 GMT

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