by darren » Sat 11 Aug 2007, 09:18:13
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pogoliamo', 'd')arren, could you please re-open the case
There's little something that bothers me - both your scenarios 1 and 2
involve USD transactions. And bidirectionally - buy/sell.
Which means the dollar is going to be more liquid and as such - widely
accepted. Definition of liquidity? And since it is accepted it better holds
the argment for using it as a reserve currency. No?
How would you explain that? And dont forget that this is subjective
and not! mathematics so no absolute truth exists. It is more a matter
of indvidual and public perception.
Cheers!
It is the currency that the seller prefers to HOLD that matters, and nothing else. Two offsetting transactions in USD have no effect on USD.
There is virtually no difference for the USD between
1. I have Euros I want oil, I buy oil in Euros, seller keeps Euros
2. I have Euros I want oil, I convert to USD, I buy oil, seller CONVERTS USD BACK TO EUROS.
Granted, this boosts the volume of FX transactions in USD somewhat... but that's a drop in the bucket compared to overall volume of FX transactions in USD. Out of 85mbpd, maybe 40mbpd (?) of that is exported (and thus sold in USD rather than local currency). Oil is 70/bbl... so that's an extra 2.1bn of USD FX transactions daily. Compared to the global FX volume, that is NOTHING. The USD is a massively held and traded currency, and the fact that international oil sales are denominated in USD is a very, very, very, very small part of the reason for that.
There are reasons to be concerned for the value of USD... but again, the currency that oil is sold in is not one of those reasons.
The perception of Joe Public, who is usually completely ignorant of basic economics, is irrelevant. The highly trained people who actually trade currencies in sizes big enough to move markets (or people who make portfolio allocation decisions for public or private sector) know that the currency that oil is sold in is irrelevant, as long as a liquid FX market exists.
For Iran to denominate sales of oil in Euros is a publicity stunt, and nothing more. It has absolutely no effect whatsoever on anything that matters.
I encourage all of you to read, and then re-read, Mr. Bill's posting on this (or any) subject. That guy knows exactly what he's talking about. (and no, I am not his alter-ego!
