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Shall we count on dollar?
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That's another tremendous amount under control of a few decision-makers in Beijing...


As USD is still a prime world's reserve currency and tender for international settlements, do you expect to remain as such or players will increasingly diversify and hedge to avoid dollar dependence?


Australia was third cab off the rank of that one.
No reserve currency lasts forever and the USD is long in the tooth on that role. It's gonna change sooner or later.

The whole crypto currency industry seems to be trying to establish itself as an alternative - although it currently looks like a wild west gambling saloon





Could be, and that's the challenge of this century. Renewable energy, cryptocurrencies, crowdsourcing/crowdfunding, commercialized space, the Internet of Things, and other technological explosions are leading us into an era where resources are much more easy to share, access and generate. It's the whole abundance thing.
At the same time, climate change and population growth are threatening to put us into a world where natural resources are diminishing and the costs of natural disasters keeps mounting. Two competing forces, both vying for the future of humanity. Which is going to win?

That's solved through price. i.e. the price of gold could escalate to cover the available monetary supply and people would trade in grams of metal...
It's no big deal from a technical perspective.
The key issues are the huge wall of debt and ownership denominated in debt, based on a debt instrument monetary system (US Dollar (plus are the other fiats) is a debt instrument it is literally loaned into existence). underpinning a financial system based on fractional reserve banking where the debt is resting on "real collateral," of a fraction of the value of the debt.
The whole thing is a recipe for disaster that is destined to collapse under its own inescapable mathematical weight.
As all fiat currencies have done in the past.

Our creative and destructive tendencies are evenly balanced, but history suggests swings to extremes now and then.

However, I've moved on from that for one simple reason.
It seems to me that most people literally live their lives without any real savings to speak of. Having a monetary system that includes (Money = Store of Value) - i.e. Gold based, may have been obsoleted by events.
Perhaps all people need is a transaction system to share "Labour Value," for the exchange of goods and services, and that's it.
Perhaps we are in a monetary transition phase where our current fiats will ultimately be replaced by something else (I have no idea what - just that it will be different from what has gone before) and the transition process is a multi-decadal process.

Our asset values are based on another number which in terms of the biggest asset most people partially own is their property on which another number moves downward in proportion to other numbers that drive it upward.
All this is quite surreal in that it's all numbers on computers which can change and adjust seemingly without any reason. The value of assets in stocks and shares go up and down without any reference to reality but on rumour and clairvoyance. Occasionally a company publishes some numbers that may or may not be true and the value of the assets change dependent on whether its in line with "market expectations." You have companies losing money who's value increases because they lose slightly less. You also have values of profitable companies going down because their profit was below this forecast. Both movements are set against another variable which is overall sector and market trends.
None of this changes anything on the ground until a company actually goes bust normally a couple of years after over-inflated valuation not based on reality but so called expert forecasts.
The dollar is a perfect example. The US dumped dollars and dollar loans after World War II to regenerate the economies of war ravaged countries. It effectively became the standard then and out of control from then on. The demand for dollars world wide meant the US treasury first printed paper called dollars then made up some numbers and sold them as bonds just as World Governments have done with Quantitative Easing. The Treasuries around the world magically created numbers that then went as loans to banks that then went as loans of more numbers to businesses who paid employees who paid some of it back as taxes to the government. They also then reduce one number down to almost zero before they hope their employer or state gives them another number to start again
The more I write the less real it seems. I don't have an alternative and I don't see it changing despite the debt mountains. It would make zero difference if the denomination of the number was not a $

Which begs the question - do we need more than 'fairy dust?'


I think it should be a fair warning that the opinions here shouldn't be treated as an investment advice of any kind

This is like people discussing 'stuff,' over a beer at a pub.
Do not assume anything said here is worthy of investing your hard earned in.

Watch out for the day, the USD ceases to be the world's reserve currency, it will then flood back to the US from the rest of the world. Could get very ugly, or might be handled really well. Depends on if the transition to what replaces it is orderly or not.

And I second/third/whatever the arning - do not take these comments as investment advice.

Australia was 3rd cab off the rank in that process.
The big one will be when Oil is sold without USD.



China and Russia are both accumulating hoards, and have been for awhile.
The USD is long in the tooth as far as reserve currencies go, they usually last approx 80 to 100 years.
I would be surprised if we don't see a major change in the world monetary system within the next 30 years, but I have no idea what that future system will be.
I have owned bullion in the past, I don't own any at the moment. I certainly would not make any sort of recommendation about owning or not owning physical metals.

Too many players amassed it: Chinese government and super rich, Russian government and oligarchs, basically any government and wealthy people.
In case of severe economic turbulence, if such may occur, it's too tempting not to pull the rug from under its feet.
French demanding to exchange dollars for gold in the past and returning empty-handed comes to mind.
What do you think?