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U.S. dollar's share of reserves rises in Q1; euro's drops

F-22Raptor

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The U.S. dollar's share of foreign exchange reserves rose for a fourth straight quarter, while the euro's hit a 13-year low, International Monetary Fund data showed on Tuesday.

The greenback's share rose in the first quarter to 64.1 percent of the total allocated reserves, equivalent to $3.887 trillion, amid expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve is likely to tighten monetary policy at least once this year. The dollar hit a 12-year high against a basket of currencies in mid-March.

"This only goes to show that the dollar is still the world's reserve currency and will be for many, many years to come," said John Doyle, director of markets at Tempus Consulting in Washington.

"With the problems surrounding Greece, it's not a surprise that central banks and investors would want sell the euro and hold a more stable currency like the dollar," Doyle added.

The euro's share of known reserves shrank to 20.7 percent, a 13-year trough. The value of euros held in allocated or known global foreign exchange reserves fell to $1.256 trillion in the first quarter from $1.343 trillion.

Analysts said Asian central banks stepped up sales of the euro as the European Central Bank unleashed a 1-trillion-euro asset purchase program and cut interest rates to negative.

The euro had hit a 12-year low of $1.0457 on March 16 and shed over 11 percent in the first quarter.

The Swiss National Bank shocked markets by removing a cap on the franc against the euro on Jan. 15. That prompted speculation the SNB probably trimmed its exposure.

"Asian central banks have been rebalancing their holdings out of the euro," said UBS currency strategist Geoff Yu. "And while the (Swiss National Bank) was a marginal buyer, the prospects of negative rates are not very appealing for these investors."

Global foreign exchange reserves fell to $11.433 trillion in the first quarter from $11.589 trillion in the fourth quarter, IMF data showed. The decline began in the third quarter of 2014.

The amount of allocated foreign exchange holdings shrank to $6.062 trillion from $6.086 trillion in the prior quarter.

Global reserves are assets of central banks held in different currencies, primarily to back their liabilities. Central banks sometimes buy and sell currencies from official international reserves to influence exchange rates.

UPDATE 2-U.S. dollar's share of reserves rises in Q1; euro's drops| Reuters
 
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Europe has to develop its military might other wise it will keep playing second fiddle to america and america might even succeed in killing the euro

In today's world paper currency is backed by economics, oil and military might. America currently has all of these , Europe ( read Germany ) cannot really compete by pretending to be goddie two shoes , it can build it economy all it wants , without military might it will keep getting kicked to second place or perhaps even further down the order ( China is there also )
 
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Euro is dying.

Greece,Portugal,Spain,Italy........it's looking unsustainable.
 
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Euro is dying.

Greece,Portugal,Spain,Italy........it's looking unsustainable.

Let's what what happens with Greece. The Euro might still survive, but at least its dreams of challenging the dollar should be put to rest soon. (Except that the dollar is dead too. :D )
 
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lol....the rise has nothing to do with EUR/USD exchange rate and Q€?
Cmon stop masturbating, labor force participation in US is at record lows, you have more non working than entire populations of some Euro countries. Get real.

20150707_spin_0.jpg


Hard data for above comic

Civilian Labor Force Participation Rate - FRED - St. Louis Fed

Also, this:

U.S, UK, China economies weakening further, OECD says| Reuters
 
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The U.S. dollar's share of foreign exchange reserves rose for a fourth straight quarter, while the euro's hit a 13-year low, International Monetary Fund data showed on Tuesday.

The greenback's share rose in the first quarter to 64.1 percent of the total allocated reserves, equivalent to $3.887 trillion, amid expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve is likely to tighten monetary policy at least once this year. The dollar hit a 12-year high against a basket of currencies in mid-March.

"This only goes to show that the dollar is still the world's reserve currency and will be for many, many years to come," said John Doyle, director of markets at Tempus Consulting in Washington.

"With the problems surrounding Greece, it's not a surprise that central banks and investors would want sell the euro and hold a more stable currency like the dollar," Doyle added.

The euro's share of known reserves shrank to 20.7 percent, a 13-year trough. The value of euros held in allocated or known global foreign exchange reserves fell to $1.256 trillion in the first quarter from $1.343 trillion.

Analysts said Asian central banks stepped up sales of the euro as the European Central Bank unleashed a 1-trillion-euro asset purchase program and cut interest rates to negative.

The euro had hit a 12-year low of $1.0457 on March 16 and shed over 11 percent in the first quarter.

The Swiss National Bank shocked markets by removing a cap on the franc against the euro on Jan. 15. That prompted speculation the SNB probably trimmed its exposure.

"Asian central banks have been rebalancing their holdings out of the euro," said UBS currency strategist Geoff Yu. "And while the (Swiss National Bank) was a marginal buyer, the prospects of negative rates are not very appealing for these investors."

Global foreign exchange reserves fell to $11.433 trillion in the first quarter from $11.589 trillion in the fourth quarter, IMF data showed. The decline began in the third quarter of 2014.

The amount of allocated foreign exchange holdings shrank to $6.062 trillion from $6.086 trillion in the prior quarter.

Global reserves are assets of central banks held in different currencies, primarily to back their liabilities. Central banks sometimes buy and sell currencies from official international reserves to influence exchange rates.

UPDATE 2-U.S. dollar's share of reserves rises in Q1; euro's drops| Reuters

I reject this news. The dollar is going to collapse by 2020 while emerging countries/BRICS currencies will become the worlds reserve currency.:D
 
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Didn't Yuan took over Dollar as world reserve currency 2 years ago? Swear to god some Chinese member told me that
 
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Didn't Tuan took over Dollar as world reserve currency 2 years ago? Swear to god some Chinese member told me that

I think that claim is repeated third Wednesday of every month here on PDF. :D
 
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@Gabriel92 @MarkusS

i want to see my european friends saying something to this, this is how americans think about you

True, but all economic crisis are seasonal, obviously there are ups and diwns. You dont tjink the Euro will remain this way do you? It will rise back. Even the U.S had economic crisis as recently as 2008 , but has recovered , so too will europe. Afterall, the U.S and E.U both have almost 90% of world reserve currency in their own currency, where are other emerging countries like Russia??:woot:

Seems like its the E.U and U.S ruling the world and running world financial insititions. :what:
 
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Thanks for breaking that number down for me. Makes more sense, i admit. However, my populism aside, imho you should not be lulled into a notion that advanced economies are well-off. Yours or mine. Or Asian. It's all in deep shyte, indebted to the neck.
 
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