• Mexico latest country
to join BRICs to replace dollar as world currency
By Bill White
Since the Bretton
Woods
system
was established after World War II, the American dollar has been the
backbone of international finance. But with American power on the
wane and the United States economy in peril, even America’s closest
neighbors are looking for dollar alternatives, evidenced by a recent
sharp upsurge in euro-denominated debt from developing countries,
particularly Mexico.
As of mid-December, $55.3B
worth of euro-denominated debt had been issued in 2013, up 34% from
2012, including major issues from Mexican companies like Petróleos
Mexicanos, better known as Pemex,
which sold more than $2B in bonds for the Europeans in November.
Pemex, the state-owned Mexican
oil and gas company, said that investor interest in euro-denominated
bonds was three times that of
dollar-denominated bonds, reflecting fears of the long-term stability
of the dollar versus the euro.
While the Fed has begun to
ease back its policy of quantitative
easing (QE),
which was designed to use inflation to help the banking sector, the
policy has generally failed.
“The euro ‘has emerged as
a more full-fledged alternative to issuing in dollars,’ said Dmitri
Gladkov, head of Russian debt capital markets at J.P. Morgan Chase &
Co., whose team helps Russian companies decide whether to issue bonds
in euros, dollars or rubles.” ‘The capacity of the euro market
has clearly proved to be exceptionally high,’” Gladkov told The
Wall Street Journal, in a December
16, 2013 article entitled “Emerging-Markets
Borrowers
Tilt Toward Euro.”
Lower European interest rates
make euro bonds more attractive to
issuers, and German sovereign debt rate, which is the
basis of many euro bonds, is part of a more stable, manufacturing
and export-based economy.
“‘There’s both pent-up
supply and pent-up demand for euro’
bonds, David Hinman, chief investment officer
at SW Asset Management, LLC, said in an
email” for the Journal
article. “Investors are looking to diversify away
from the dollar.”
This move against the dollar
on global debt transactions is part of a
larger move against the dollar internationally, as
the BRICS nations—Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa—and
others have begun signing bilateral and
multilateral trade agreements in
national currencies, and Russia has begun proposing an alternative,
Eurasian-oriented, clone of Bretton Woods.
Bill White is a
freelance journalist and publisher based in Virginia. He has also
written articles for THE BARNES REVIEW (TBR)
magazine.
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