by Petrodollar » Mon 14 May 2007, 15:37:01
The real issue at stake is the dollar slowly but irrevocably losing its reserve currency status - and the ruble is playing a role in these macro trends - despite your attempts to ignore the mounting evidence or change the subject away from the core facts and trends. Here's an article that I recommend in its entirety:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]CAN THE "AXIS THE OIL" TOPPLE THE US DOLLAR?
by Gary Dorsch
Editor, Global Money Trends Magazine
May 1, 2007
http://www.financialsense.com/fsu/edito ... /0501.html(excerpt that illustrates the real point about Russian petrorubles)
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]“Axis of Oil” Chipping away at US Dollar’s Base of Support
The “Axis of Oil” led by Russia, Iran, and Venezuela, [b]is slowly chipping away at the US dollar’s status as the world’s “reserve currency.” Russia, the world’s second largest oil exporter demands rubles in exchange for its Urals crude oil, and Iran, the world’s fourth largest oil exporter is earning most of its revenues in the Euro. Venezuela’s central bank began shifting its FX reserves to Euros in 2005.
The “Axis of Oil” seeks to draw China into its sphere, exploiting China’s huge thirst for oil. Iran became China’s top oil supplier in January, providing 2.14 million tons of crude, up 13% over the same month last year, and tripling that of December’s supply of 740,000 tons. China aims to establish 625 million barrels of strategic petroleum reserves to be able to cover 90 days of net oil imports by 2015.
China’s state-run Zhuhai Zhenrong, the biggest buyer of Iranian crude worldwide, began paying for its oil in Euros late last year. Japanese refiners who buy 500,000 bpd of Iranian crude, or a fifth of Iran’s 2.4 million-bpd shipments, continue to pay in dollars but are willing to shift to yen if asked.
A major share of global trade in commodities belongs to crude oil, which is widely transacted in US dollars. That forces oil importers and central banks to buy US dollars, regardless of the direction of US interest rates. Last month, world-wide oil consumption rose to 85.5 million bpd. By 2030, crude oil demand is expected to reach 118 million bpd,
so the dollar-crude oil link is vital to maintain the dollar’s “reserve currency” status, and allowing America to live beyond its means.
Right now, the only serious threat to the US dollar’s international dominance is the Euro. The gross domestic product of the Euro zone is roughly the same as that of the US, and its population is 60% bigger. Europe is the Middle East’s biggest trading partner, is a major oil importer, has a comparable share of global trade as the US, but its external accounts are much better balanced. The Euro zone ran a current account deficit of only 3.2 billion euros ($4.2 billion) over the past 12-months.
But the “Axis of Oil” could topple the US dollar, if it demands payment for oil sales in Euros. In November 2000, Saddam Hussein insisted that Iraq’s oil be paid for in Euros. When the value of the Euro rose, Iraq’s oil revenues increased accordingly. The economic threat this represented to the US dollar might have been one of the reasons why the Bush administration was so anxious to topple Saddam.
Russian Bear Leads the Assault on the US DollarBut a greater threat to the US dollar’s hegemony is the “Axis of Oil.” Russia is the #1 producer of natural gas and the #2 producer of crude oil and much of its vast energy assets are still under exploration. Each up-tick in the oil price pumps billions of additional dollars into the Kremlin’s coffers. One year ago, on May 10th, Russian kingpin Vladimir Putin declared that Russian Urals blend crude oil would be traded for Russian rubles, instead of US dollars, and made the ruble fully convertible.One month later, on June 8th, 2006, the Russian central bank said it had cut the share of US dollars in its reserves by 5% to 50% and boosted the Euro’s share to 40%, with the rest in sterling and yen. Due to soaring oil revenues and an appreciating Euro, Russia’s foreign exchange reserves have mushroomed to $361 billion today, the third largest in the world, behind China and Japan.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ussia’s FX reserves now exceed its outstanding foreign debt of $103 billion, a vast improvement since 1998, when Moscow defaulted on $40 billion of debt repayments. Russia’s FX reserves ballooned with a widening foreign trade surplus, which rose to $164.4 billion in 2006, up 15.1% from 2005. Two thirds of Russia’s oil and natural gas exports were shipped to the European Union.
Russia’s $800 billion economy expanded at a sizzling 8.4% rate in the first quarter, and industrial production was 16% higher from a year ago, outpaced only by China and India.
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