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View Full Version : BRICS dumping euro amid simmering EU banking crisis



General of Darkness
1st April 2013, 04:44 PM
Doom on.

BRICS dumping euro amid simmering EU banking crisis Get short URL (http://rt.com/business/eu-banking-crisis-imf-euro-brics-141/)
Published time: April 01, 2013 08:35
http://rt.com/files/news/1e/8d/50/00/euro-__set-back-a-generation__-by-eu-banking-crisis.si.jpg People withdraw money from Bank of Cyprus ATM's while employees gather outside the bank's headquarters in Athens (AFP Photo / Louisa Goulouimaki)







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BRICS (http://rt.com/tags/brics/), Banking (http://rt.com/tags/banking/), China (http://rt.com/tags/china/), Crisis (http://rt.com/tags/crisis/), EU (http://rt.com/tags/eu/), Economy (http://rt.com/tags/economy/), Global economy (http://rt.com/tags/global-economy/), Globalization (http://rt.com/tags/globalization/), Robert Bridge (http://rt.com/tags/robert-bridge/), Russia (http://rt.com/tags/russia/), UN (http://rt.com/tags/un/), USA (http://rt.com/tags/usa/)

Brussels has been forced to eat a generous slice of humble pie: A massive sell-off of the euro is underway in the wake of a persistent financial crisis, as holdings in the European currency by emerging economies were slashed by almost 8 percent last year.
Emerging economies – including Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) – are dumping the euro, having sold €45 billion of the currency in 2012, according to data gathered by the International Monetary Fund.
The euro represents just 24 percent of their reserves, the lowest level since 2002 – the year when euro coins and banknotes first entered circulation – and down from a peak of 31 percent in 2009. At the same time, the euro's share of total global reserves has also fallen. This change of fortune for the euro is blamed on several factors, including sovereign debt crises and rapid growth by BRICS nations.
Last week, China and Brazil agreed to a $30-billion swap deal that would give each the ability to borrow the other's currency in the event of future turbulence in the global financial system. The move undercuts the need to use the dollar as a reserve currency; given China’s increasing economic might, Beijing appears to be steadily promoting its national currency, the renminbi.
The US dollar, which has been designated the world’s reserve currency since the Bretton Woods agreement in 1944, continues to hold ground at about 60 percent of emerging markets’ reserves.
This ‘euro flight’ is disturbing news for Brussels and the eurozone: The euro's challenge to the international status of the US dollar has been “set back a generation,” as new data show developing countries dumping the European currency from their official reserves, FT reported, citing IMF data.
This retreat of the European currency, once heralded as a serious rival to the ubiquitous dollar, offers a shocking glimpse at the severity of Europe's sovereign debt crisis, which recently saw Cyprus take the unprecedented step of penalizing wealthy bank depositors in order to avoid bankruptcy.
"It'll be the number-two international currency, but I wouldn't say there are any prospects of it challenging the dollar," Jeffrey Frankel, professor of economics at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government told FT.
However, the sheer size of the eurozone – 17 EU member-states that have officially accepted the euro as their common currency – continues to make the euro competitive as a reserve currency, Frankel emphasized.
At the same time, investors are becoming nervous about whether the euro will remain attractive over the long haul, haunted as they are by the ghosts of the Spain, Italy, Greece and Cyprus disruptions.
The euro may regain its shine if Europe moves towards “fiscal union and a single sovereign bond market,” FT noted. However, the EU may have missed its chance to act as “big shifts in the global economy boost new emerging market currencies,” such as China’s renminbi, presenting a bold challenge to both the euro and the dollar.
"The dollar is holding its own for now, and we are moving towards a multicurrency system," Edwin Truman, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute think-tank in Washington told the UK business paper.
Currently, the euro is used daily by some 332 million Europeans.
Robert Bridge, RT (http://rt.com/search/everywhere/term/robert+bridge/)

Spectrism
1st April 2013, 07:39 PM
The Euro is toast. The dollar will follow within 2-3 weeks. We should be in a different world this summer. Be ready to jump. Have immediate bills paid off so there is no immediate liability. Then pull remaining cash. Small cash reserve with preps finalized. This is about the end of that line for "preps". Soon we go into operational mode.

Hypertiger
1st April 2013, 07:58 PM
from 1944 to late 2007...The USA was supplying the world with all the inflation in teh form of the US dollar to sustain the world....the global trade system or bretton woods which has powered the roaring 6 decades since the end of the 1933-1945 bankruptcy reorganization of the previous global trade system that collapsed.

In late 2007 the USA reached the maximum potential to sustain the inflation of the world...and now as the supply of US dollars to the rest of the world is being cut...The USA is 10 Trillion dollars short at this point...the EU is collapsing and China is slowing down.

BarnkleBob
2nd April 2013, 08:01 AM
Its all a part & parcel of central planning.... these guys KNOW the math, the rest is just theatrics! As HT has been saying for yrs, once max potential is reached, a new system constructed on new lies will emerge. What we are viewing is not chaos per se, but the slow introduction of the new system by sequences or acts so as to not scare or frighten the barnyard animals from playing the prey v predator game.....

mick silver
2nd April 2013, 08:13 AM
they maybe moving to something new but yet there way to many people of this earth .

Spectrism
2nd April 2013, 09:23 AM
The globalist plan is to control everyone under ONE money system. That means they have to kill the existing fiats still out there. They will not inflate and dump money on everyone, relieving them of their debt. Instead, they will transfer the debt into the new system. It appears that they cannot have people trying to transfer any significant wealth into the system since the new system will serve one master at the top- not the bottom slaves.

mick silver
2nd April 2013, 09:25 AM
the new digital system on it way it called bitcoins

vacuum
2nd April 2013, 11:54 AM
The euro may regain its shine if Europe moves towards “fiscal union and a single sovereign bond market,” FT noted.
What they're talking about is a single european government.