What's new

China intends to oust dollar from oil trade

TaiShang

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Apr 30, 2014
Messages
27,848
Reaction score
70
Country
China
Location
Taiwan, Province Of China
China intends to oust dollar from oil trade
8 Sep, 2015 14:22

55eeea10c461885d688b4587.jpg

© Carlos Garcia Rawlins / Reuters

China is planning to launch its own oil benchmark in October, similar to Brent and WTI, striving for a more important role in establishing crude prices. Unlike the Western benchmarks, the Chinese contracts will be nominated in the yuan, not the US dollar.

Shanghai International Energy Exchange sent a draft futures contract to market players in August, Reuters
reported quoting sources.

Oil futures will be the first Chinese contract to permit direct participation of foreign investors. However, this is not the first step for greater oil market openness in China. In July, Beijing allowed private companies to import crude. Previously importing was only done by state-run majors such as Sinopec, China National Petroleum Corporation and China National Offshore Oil Corporation, the Xinhua news agency reported.

A Shanghai-based contract will compete in the crude futures market, which is worth of trillions of dollars and is dominated by two contracts, London's Brent, seen as the global benchmark, and WTI, the key U.S. price.

North Sea, Brent oil was first developed in the 1970s. The ICE Brent futures contract was developed in 1988. With an approximate output of only 1 million barrels per day, this blend is considered a benchmark and its contracts are now used to set prices for roughly 2/3 of the world's oil.

China is one of the world's largest oil buyers. Nearly 60 percent of its oil consumption comes from imports.
 
A move that is long overdue。

A move that's overdue, but also extremely dangerous. Attacking the petrodollar system was the trigger for US aggression against Iraq and Libya. It's also one of the biggest stumbling blocks in Iran-US relations.

We could invade and incorporate all the remaining Spratly islands tomorrow, and the US wouldn't really care, only sending us an angry letter. But maintaining monetary hegemony is one of the US' red lines. Recall how angry they were when China established the AIIB - it was a lot more passionate than 'concern' over hacking, island disputes, human rights, etc. The petrodollar system is another pillar of US monetary hegemony. I hope the Chinese government is prepared for US fury that may translate into actions.
 
China making steps towards becoming a strong economic super power but USA will literally lose its sleep over this development. It will be quite interesting to see USAs response in this as its not a weak non nuclear nation that they can just bomb and invade but a powerful nuclear nation with a huge military might and is rhe rival of USA.

Either the us will get really angry and we may even see small naval military skirmishes between the two nations with huge support to terrorism in china or we will see USA just protest and grind its teeth.
 
A move that's overdue, but also extremely dangerous. Attacking the petrodollar system was the trigger for US aggression against Iraq and Libya. It's also one of the biggest stumbling blocks in Iran-US relations.

We could invade and incorporate all the remaining Spratly islands tomorrow, and the US wouldn't really care, only sending us an angry letter. But maintaining monetary hegemony is one of the US' red lines. Recall how angry they were when China established the AIIB - it was a lot more passionate than 'concern' over hacking, island disputes, human rights, etc. The petrodollar system is another pillar of US monetary hegemony. I hope the Chinese government is prepared for US fury that may translate into actions.

China is not Iraq or Libya.
 
I also intend to win the lottery next Sunday.....If wishes were horses....
 
Yeah and US will just sit there taking it ? if they go down they will take everyone with them...
 

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom