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–The Euro...The New World Currency?
Meltdown of U.S. Dollar Underway
NaturalNews
Comments by China that it intends to move away from its reliance on the
dollar triggered a sharp drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average and
heightened worldwide fears about the U.S. currency's stability. Chinese
Central Bank Vice Director Xiu Jian said that his country is planning to
shift much of its $1.4 trillion national currency reserve from dollars
to more stable currencies, such as the euro or Canadian dollar. After
these comments, the dollar fell to record lows relative to other
currencies -- the lowest ever against the euro, the lowest in a
generation against the British pound, and the lowest in 57 years against
the Canadian dollar.
"The big issue on any currency is if its rate of depreciation is so fast
that it scares away all capital, and the announcement that we heard from
China sort of feeds those fears," said Larry Smith, chief investment
officer at Third Wave Global Investors.
China is the world's largest investor in U.S. Treasury bonds and
securities, holding more U.S. debt than any country but Japan. Because
China's currency is linked to the dollar, the country also maintains a
massive reserve of the currency.
But this policy had already begun to shift at the time of Xiu's
comments. China has divested approximately 5 percent of its $400 billion
holdings in the U.S. Treasury and established a $200 billion fund to
help diversify its investments in equities and stocks around the world.
"We will favor stronger currencies over weaker ones, and will readjust
accordingly," said Cheng Siwei, vice chairman of China's National
People's Congress.
It is not just U.S. investors who are concerned. Because the dollar's
fluctuations have driven up the euro, exports in Europe have fallen and
sparked fears for the stability of that continent's economy. In a recent
speech, French president Nicolas Sarkozy added his voice to those
calling for the Bush administration to act to stabilize the currency.
"The dollar cannot remain 'someone else's problem,' " Sarkozy said. "If
we are not careful, monetary disarray could morph into economic war. We
would all be its victims."
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