by Dreamtwister » Fri 09 Jun 2006, 00:34:08
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('XOVERX', 'C')an somebody break this down into a simpler explanation for me. Sorry.
Pardon me if this has been covered before, but it's as much to test my own understanding as it is to enlighten XOVERX. (I'm going for points here Petrodollar, let me know how I do.)
Until now, if you want to buy or sell oil, there are only 2 places to do it: the
New York Mercantile Exchange and the
Intercontinental Exchange (formerly the called IPE). While private contracts are possible, the bulk of all oil in the world is traded via these 2 companies.
Since both companies trade exclusively in US dollars, if a someone wanted to do business with either exchange, they
MUST have maintained a stockpile of US dollars in reserve. Since virtually every country either buys or sells oil, virtually everyone has a USD reserve. This is really good for the US, since the US can basically print money at will to pay thier bills, knowing full well that some country somewhere will scoop those dollars up and put them into thier own reserve and hide inflation. This is something the US Fed has been doing at a furious pace. In fact, they have been printing money faster than foriegn reserves can absorb it, pushing up inflation. Hence the interest rate hikes.
Now, all of those countries who are holding USD reserves and watching the Fed's printing presses running 24/7 and are starting to realize "Hey, if they keep printing dollars, the dollars we already have will lose value!"
What's happening here is that this Russian futures exchange will allow people to buy and sell oil in
something other than US dollars. Suddenly, those countries who are holding all of those US dollars don't
need to hold US dollars to buy oil. And since the US is trying to print it's way out of debt, those foriegn investors are starting to divest themselves of USD holdings while their dollars are still worth something.
The problem is, as mentioned before, virtually everyone has a huge stockpile of USD. If everyone dumps their dollar holdings at once, all of those trillions of dollars will flood the global economy and crash the US dollar. If even one or two major holders of USD dump their holdings, it could trigger a panic selloff and crash the dollar anyway. The results would be disastrous.
But rest assured, they all want to get out of the dollar business. There's no gold left, there's no manufacturing base (except SUV's and fighter planes), there's no oil exports, very little skilled labour, and virtually everything of value in the states is already owned by foriegners. There's nothing of value left to invest in, so they want out. The only reason to hold USD for the last ~30 years has been to use it to buy oil, and now there's another option for that as well.
The whole of human history is a refutation by experiment of the concept of "moral world order". - Friedrich Nietzsche