By Carl Delfeld
Over the last several years, gurus and pundits have been predicting that the U.S. dollar will collapse. Many of these “experts” believe that the greenback will soon be replaced by the Chinese yuan as the world’s leading reserve currency.
And instead of admitting that they were just plain wrong, they keep beating the drum of pessimism and despair.
Meanwhile, I’ve been a consistent dollar bull and China skeptic, and I believe the yuan has no chance of replacing the dollar.
As you can see from the chart below from KKR & Co. L.P., the dollar rally that began in 2011 is 43 months old and the last extended bull market for the greenback lasted almost twice as long.
Free Reports:
The currency game is a relative game.
America certainly has significant financial challenges that need to be dealt with, but it offers many attributes that make the dollar the premier reserve currency of the world.
Attributes such as political stability, deep and broad liquidity, vibrant capital markets, openness, and free convertibility and acceptance of the U.S. dollar worldwide more than offset our debt issue.
For my friends at the IMF who are considering adding the Chinese yuan to the SDR basket, thereby indirectly recognizing it as a reserve currency: Don’t do it.
On the issue of liquidity, the Chinese yuan is a long way from being convertible across the board.
Chinese exporters who receive U.S. dollars are forced to turn them over to the central bank (this is how China built its $4 trillion in reserves). Citizens can’t take it out of the country. And it isn’t accepted as legal tender anywhere outside of China.
And it’s going to be a long time before China allows its currency to freely float, because the whole system is built on tightly controlling the yuan’s value. If the yuan strengthened 15% in six months, millions of exporters – already on razor-thin margins – would go bust.
In addition, China’s weaknesses as a global safe haven are glaringly obvious. For example, all of its strategic industries are firmly in state hands and its judicial system is anything but independent.
There’s also significant political risk. China’s decision-making process is anything but transparent. In addition, its more aggressive posture regarding territorial disputes with Japan and some Southeast Asian nations is a bit disquieting.
To highlight all of this, let me tell you a story I heard from a friend about Myanmar, a country that’s very close to China both economically and politically.
Apparently, the Myanmar central bank has canceled foreign-exchange licenses issued to thousands of businesses including hotels, restaurants, and supermarkets in a bid to curb the growing use of U.S. dollars in the economy as the domestic currency, the kyat, has lost considerable value.
This move came three weeks before Myanmar holds elections on November 8. Businesses will have to give up their licenses and will no longer be able to trade in U.S. dollars.
Clearly, the preference of many businesses to accept the dollar over the local currency or the yuan speaks volumes about the dollar’s enduring acceptance.
Economic history indicates that no country has ever achieved greatness, nor maintained it, by debasing its currency.
Have you ever heard of a country in deep economic trouble because of a strong currency? The value of a nation’s currency is a reflection of the perceived value of the country in the global marketplace.
Which is why I believe a strong and stable dollar policy enhances U.S. competitiveness, job growth, standard of living, capital investment, share prices, and our ability to finance our public debt.
I’ll admit that a weaker U.S. dollar would make it easier for U.S. exporters to sell their goods and services overseas, but this is offset by several factors:
With interest rates at or near zero, we need every incentive possible to attract the capital necessary to finance our public debt and infrastructure needs.
The value of a nation’s currency is a true reflection of the market value of the country in the global marketplace. And maintaining the value of the U.S. dollar is in the national interest, as well as the best interests of American consumers, businesses, and investors.
Good investing,
Carl T. Delfeld
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