Dollar Loses Reserve Status to Yen & Euro
Ben Bernanke's dollar crisis went into a wider mode yesterday as the greenback
was shockingly upstaged by the euro and yen, both of which can lay claim to the
world title as the currency favored by central banks as their reserve currency.
Over the last three months, banks put 63 percent of their new cash into euros
and yen -- not the greenbacks -- a nearly complete reversal of the dollar's
onetime dominance for reserves, according to Barclays Capital. The dollar's
share of new cash in the central banks was down to 37 percent -- compared with
two-thirds a decade ago.
Currently, dollars account for about 62 percent of the currency reserve at
central banks -- the lowest on record, said the International Monetary Fund.
Bernanke could go down in economic history as the man who killed the greenback
on the operating table.
After printing up trillions of new dollars and new bonds to stimulate the US
economy, the Federal Reserve chief is now boxed into a corner battling two
separate monsters that could devour the economy -- ravenous inflation on one
hand, and a perilous recession on the other.
"He's in a crisis worse than the meltdown ever was," said Peter Schiff,
president of Euro Pacific Capital. "I fear that he could be the Fed chairman
who brought down the whole thing."
Investors and central banks are snubbing dollars because the greenback is kept
too weak by zero interest rates and a flood of greenbacks in the global
economy.
They grumble that they've loaned the US record amounts to cover its mounting
debt, but are getting paid back by a currency that's worth 10 percent less in
the past three months alone. In a decade, it's down nearly one-third.
Yesterday, the dollar had a mixed performance, falling slightly against the
British pound to $1.5801 from $1.5846 Friday, but rising against the euro to
$1.4779 from $1.4709 and against the yen to 89.85 yen from 89.78.
Economists believe the market rebellion against the dollar will spread until
Bernanke starts raising interest rates from around zero to the high single
digits, and pulls back the flood of currency spewed from US printing presses.
"That's a cure, but it's also going to stifle any US economic growth," said
Schiff. "The economy is addicted to the cheap interest and liquidity."
Economists warn that a jump in rates will clobber stocks and cripple the already
stalled housing market.
"Bernanke's other choice is to keep rates at zero, print even more money and
sell more debt, but we'll see triple-digit inflation that could collapse the
economy as we know it.
"The stimulus is what's toxic -- we're poisoning ourselves and the global
economy with it."
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