Do You Need to Worry About De-Dollarization

Posted by Jacob Radke

A reserve currency is a currency that is held in status by institutions all around the world. An employee at McDonalds in the US would look confused if you tried to hand them a British Pound, but an employee at McDonalds in the UK would be business as usual if you handed them a US dollar.

This strength is what allows the US to run such large deficits. It allows them to continuously print more money to pay it creditors which stimulates more demand for its currency, and as long as trust is continued in the US’s ability to find buyers for its debt that should continue.

In recent weeks this strength has been called into question with the agreement between the Saudis and the Chinese with the PetroYuan and the formation of the BRICS alliance.

The overarching theme across the globe is deglobalization. Globalization is what made every nation in the world richer, and what do richer nations do. They try to become the central hub for trade in their region, then the world.

There is an immense pressure in every nation to make sure vital technology does not fall into the hands of foreign adversaries. Semiconductors between the US and China are number one on that list.

There you have it rich nations try to do rich nation things.

So why does this matter for the US Dollar?

Here’s what I’ll tell you. As of today, safety still lies within the Dollar, trade will continue and debt will be created to stimulate the demand. But we today are not in the same position we were before. There are holes in the system, unfunded social security, pension liabilities, and projects that all require capital infusion. Yet when you look at the government debt today it cannot be created as it once could.

When you look at the $31 trillion debt level, most of that is fine today. It’s the refinancing that matters. Most of that debt is financed at near zero interest rates and what happens is not that the government finds money and pay you off. No they print more money and create new debt to pay you with. The problem is this new debt is WAY more expensive, to the tune of it nearly being the projected 4th largest expense on the governments income statement and climbing.

So what happens when they start refinancing, which they always are doing, filling pension and social security holes, and creating new spending bills. The debt climbs higher and we get closer to not being able to issue more.

What happens when you can’t issue more debt, people start buying other debt.

What happens when people start buying other debt, your debt becomes less and less important around the globe.

This is how you lose a reserve currency slowly and other rich nations take over.

So how do we fix this:

  1. I don’t know, I am not a policy expert nor will I probably ever be.
  2. Reduce taxes and deregulate; GDP grows faster than the debt and therefor the government can continue issuing mass amounts of new debt (the rich get richer and the poor get poorer here).
  3. Increase taxes; more hypothetical income to stimulate the creation of more debt (not ideal for politicians or in the interest of people) - in this scenario there is not much incentive to make more since you will get eaten away by taxes. Elon Musk might not have started Tesla if taxes on the highest earners were 70-80%.
  4. Create inflation to inflate the debt away (through robust GDP growth - also not ideal for a nation or its citizens).

Let me be clear, everyone's answer is “let’s spend less and reduce the debt”. I believe that is fundamentally wrong, because it immediately means the Dollar is no longer a reserve currency. The government is the only entity that survives by creating more debt. What we need is an economic boom like no other, deregulation and increased incentives is the move to make.

Let me also be clear, this will not happen quickly. This WILL take years to play out and I wouldn’t make any bets on the Dollar dying next year. I may be 50 by the time the reserve currency is something else.

Anyways those are my thoughts on the Dollar, here’s everything I read and wrote this week.

Markets

Running the Tape - Hire Slow Fire Fast

Daily Chartbook #180 - Daily Chartbook

The Worries Over Commercial Real Estate - by Eric Soda (substack.com)

The 60-40 Investment Strategy Is Back After Tanking Last Year - WSJ

No Sellers, No Buyers - The Irrelevant Investor

Hiding in plain sight - The Reformed Broker

Investing

America Is Back in the Factory Business - WSJ

Walmart Closing Four Stores in Chicago, Citing Years of Losses - WSJ

Exxon Deal Hunt Signals Possible Shale M&A Wave - WSJ

Nike's China Sales Are Rising as Covid-19 Lockdowns Ended | Barron's (barrons.com)

Visualizing the Decline in Combustion Vehicle Sales (visualcapitalist.com)

AI Can Write a Song, but It Can’t Beat the Market - WSJ

Visualizing the World’s Plummeting Fertility Rate (visualcapitalist.com)

Warner Bros. Discovery unveils new 'Max' streaming service (cnbc.com)

Stability AI CEO Says AI Will Prove More Disruptive Than the Pandemic (goldmansachs.com)

Economics

CPI = 5.0% (Time to Stop Raising Rates) - The Big Picture (ritholtz.com)

Inflation Eases to 5% In March, Lowest in Nearly Two Years - WSJ

Supplier Prices Fell in March, Adding to Signs of Moderating Inflation - WSJ

Bank Volatility to Cut U.S. Economic Growth, IMF Says - WSJ

Federal Reserve staff projects "mild recession" after banking sector turmoil (axios.com)

Charted: 30 Years of Central Bank Gold Demand (visualcapitalist.com)

Help Wanted! - The Big Picture (ritholtz.com)

Personal Finance

The Breadcrumbs Leading to Enough – Calibrating Capital

How Rich Are the Baby Boomers? - A Wealth of Common Sense

The Ultimate Level of Wealth - A Wealth of Common Sense

Worry About the Right Things - The Irrelevant Investor

Miscellaneous

The Commodification of Self - by kyla scanlon (substack.com)

Elon Musk BBC interview: Twitter boss on layoffs, misinfo and sleeping in the office - BBC News

The poop emoji: a legal history - The Verge

50 Ways the World is Getting Better - A Wealth of Common Sense

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