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Trump weaponizing dollar seen as needless BRICS provocationThe dollar looks likely to dominate the world economy for the foreseeable future.
Bloomberg Opinion
Last Updated IST
<div class="paragraphs"><p>US President-elect Donald Trump.&nbsp;</p></div>

US President-elect Donald Trump. 

Credit: Reuters Photo

By Ruth Carson and Matthew Burgess

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Donald Trump’s fresh pressure on countries around the world to stay anchored to a US-dollar-based financial system is a tactic that risks backfiring, market watchers say.

The dollar looks likely to dominate the world economy for the foreseeable future and emerging nations’ idea of setting up their own single currency is “hot air,” said Mark Sobel, a retired 40-year veteran of currency policy who worked at the US Treasury. 

Trump’s latest intervention does though risk undermining the greenback and increasing the likelihood of such pacts by encouraging countries to explore ways to avoid the US currency. Russia responded on Monday with the Kremlin saying the dollar’s appeal is already eroding and that forcing countries to use it would “further strengthen the trend” away from it. 

“It isn’t a good look,” Brad Setser, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and a former US Treasury official during Barack Obama’s presidency, wrote on. It “indirectly elevates the stature of a non-threat and suggests a lack of confidence in the dollar,” he said.

Trump on the weekend warned the so-called BRICS countries he would require a commitment that they wouldn’t create a new currency as an alternative to using the greenback, and repeated threats to levy a 100% tariff on them if they did. 

While South Africa said on Monday there are no plans to create such a rival, Saturday’s post to his Truth Social network echo comments Trump made in his election campaign and highlight how governments and traders will need to stay alert at all-hours to his use of social media in the next four years.

Any attempt to dethrone the greenback is easier said than done. 

It accounted for about 88% of all trades in the $7.5 trillion-a-day foreign exchange market, based on the latest triennial survey from the Bank for International Settlements published in 2022. 

The size and strength of the US economy is also unparalleled, Treasuries are still one of the safest ways to store money, and the greenback is still the ultimate beneficiary of haven flows. The dollar resumed its rally on Monday, pressuring currencies in the developed world with the Australian dollar and the euro dropping about 1%. The gauge of the greenback gained nearly 6% this year. 

“The dollar remains dominant for several reasons: the USD is the most liquid currency in the world, trades freely, it is also the lending currency of the world,” said Rodrigo Catril, a strategist at National Australia Bank Ltd. in Sydney. 

But he added that if “Trump increases the pressure on BRICS, it may well accelerate a move away from the dollar.”

BRICS members control more than 40% of central-bank reserves globally and have discussed ways to reduce reliance on the greenback — including the idea of a single currency for use between them.

In its statement, South Africa’s government said “the discussions within BRICS focus on trading among member countries using their own national currencies.”

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(Published 03 December 2024, 15:58 IST)