April 30, 2025
(Cryptopolitan)
–
Global central banks could be looking beyond the US dollar after US President
Donald Trump
slapped countries with tariffs, causing geopolitical risks and economic uncertainty.
According to analysts at
Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
, Asian currencies, such as the South Korean won, the
Singapore
dollar, and the Chinese yuan, could benefit the most from de-dollarization agendas.
In an
April 30
note authored by strategists Danny Suwanapruti and
Rina Jio
,
Goldman Sachs
said the dollar and euro continue to lead global reserves, but allocations to so-called “non-traditional” assets could soon overtake them.
“We believe the diversification away from the dollar should persist, as this trend has been well entrenched for the past decade,” the analysts wrote.
China, South Korea and Singapore could attract more reserves
According to the analysts, the demand for South Korea’s currency could increase due to the nation’s expected entry into the FTSE World Government Bond Index in 2025, opening doors to more international bond investors.
The US dollar traded at 1,420.94 against the South Korean won on Wednesday, a downtick of
11.20 won
or 0.78% from the previous trading session. Over the past four weeks, the dollar has fallen 3.54% against the won. However, on a year-over-year basis, the greenback is up by 3.14%.
Since
March 30
, the USD has weakened by 2.80% against the
Singapore
dollar, and over the last 12 months, it has dropped by 4.01%.
In
Eastern Asia
, Chinese President
Xi Jinping
and his administration are pleading with other countries and changing policies to boost international use of the yuan over the greenback. In early April, the People’s
Bank of China
(PBOC) expanded its cross-border financial services in
Vietnam
and
Cambodia
through
China UnionPay
, a financial services network controlled by the central bank.
The
UnionPay
expansion includes QR-code-based payment systems that allow tourists and small businesses to use QR codes instead of dollars in daily transactions. Simultaneously, the PBOC’s offshore yuan swap lines with foreign central banks reached a record
4.3 trillion yuan
(
$591.2 billion
) in February.
The PBOC also pledged to strengthen its proprietary international payment system, CIPS, and advance the integration of blockchain technology, the foundation of China’s digital yuan.
Meanwhile, Bloomberg’s dollar index has dropped more than 7% since peaking in February, after demand across the
$7.5 trillion
-per-day foreign exchange market weakens by the day.
“The
United States
weaponizing tariffs has cast doubt over US asset safety,” said
E. Yongjian
, vice general manager of the Bank of Communications’ research department. “That, in turn, has made yuan assets more attractive, and will help broaden cross-border use of the Chinese currency.”
Trump 2.0 tariffs are breaking USD dominance
Since returning to office on
January 20
, President
Donald Trump
has implemented the highest tariff barriers around the US economy in over a century. His targets have mostly been countries that do business with
China
, a strategy that economists believe will hurt the dollar’s dominance as a reserve currency.
At a recent press conference, PBOC Vice Governor
Lu Lei
said that protectionism and trade friction with the US are forcing Chinese companies investing overseas to move shop away from the West.
“Unilateralism, protectionism … and higher tariffs impact the global supply chain,” he reckoned.
Officials within China’s
National Development and Reform Commission
, like researcher Qu Fengjie, see a scenario in which
China
outpaces the US in global influence. In what he called “East Rising and West Declining,” Fengjie predicts that cutting the supply chain would favor a stronger yuan and help
China
“break the old order of the international monetary system.”
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