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“The Financial System Is Vulnerable,” NYFed Asks “Could The Dollar Lose Its Reserve Status?”

“The Financial System Is Vulnerable,” NYFed Asks “Could The Dollar Lose Its Reserve Status?” thumbnail

When a tin-foil-hat-wearing blog full of digital dickweeds suggest the dollar’s reserve currency status is at best diminishing, it is fobbed off as yet another conspiracy theory (yet to be proved conspiracy fact) too horrible to imagine for the status quo huggers. But when the VP of Research at the New York Fed asks “Could the dollar lose its status as the key international currency for international trade and international financial transactions,” and further is unable to say why not, it is perhaps worth considering the principal contributing factors she warns of.

 

Via The World Economic Forum blog,

Could the dollar lose its status as the key international currency for international trade and international financial transactions, and if so, what would be the principal contributing factors?

Speculation about this issue has long been abundant, and views diverse. After the introduction of the euro, there was much public debate about the euro displacing the dollar (Frankel 2008). The monitoring and analysis included in the ECB’s reports on “The International Role of the Euro” (e.g. ECB 2013) show that the international use of the euro mainly progressed in the years prior to 2004, and that it has largely stalled since then. More recently, the euro has been displaced by the renminbi as the debate’s main contender for reducing the international role of the dollar (Frankel 2011).

This debate has mainly argued in terms of ‘traditional’ determinants of international currency status, such as country size, economic stability, openness to trade and capital flows and the depth and liquidity of financial markets (Portes and Rey 1998). Considerations regarding the strength of country institutions have more recently been added to the list. All of these factors influence the ability of currencies to function as stores of value, to support liquidity, and to be accepted for international payments. Inertia also plays a role (e.g. Krugman 1984, Goldberg 2010), raising the bar for currencies that might uproot the status quo.

We argue here – building on discussions we began during the World Economic Forum Summit on the Global Agenda 2013 – that the rise in global financial-market integration implies an even broader set of drivers of the future roles of international currencies. In particular, we maintain that the set of drivers should include the institutional and regulatory frameworks for financial stability.

The emphasis on financial stability is linked with the expanded awareness of governments and international investors of the importance of safety and liquidity of related reserve assets. For a currency to have international reserve status, the related assets must be useable with minimal transaction-price impact, and have relatively stable values in times of stress. If the risk of banking stress or failures is substantial, and the potential fiscal consequences are sizeable, the safety of sovereign assets is compromised exactly at times of financial stress, through the contingent fiscal liabilities related to systemic banking crises. Monies with reserve-currency status therefore need to be ones with low probabilities of twin sovereign and financial crises. Financial stability reforms can – alongside fiscal prudence – help protect the safety and liquidity of sovereign assets, and can hence play a crucial role for reserve-currency status.

The broader emphasis on financial stability also derives indirectly from the expanded awareness in the international community of the occasionally disruptive international spillovers of centre-country funding shocks (Rey 2013). We argue that regulatory reforms can play a role in influencing these spillovers. Resilience-enhancing financial regulation of global banks can help reduce the volatility of capital flows that are intermediated through such banks.

On financial stability and reserve-currency status

International reserve assets tend to be provided by sovereigns, notably due to the fiscal capacity of the state and the credibility of the lender of last resort function of the central bank during liquidity crises (see also De Grauwe 2011 and Gourinchas and Jeanne 2012). Systemic financial events can be accompanied by pressures on the government budget, however. While provision of a fiscal backstop to the banking sector is not the best ex ante approach to policy, fiscal support will tend to be forthcoming if the risk and estimated welfare costs of a systemic fallout are otherwise deemed too high.

Yet banking sector risks – and inadequate capacity within the banking sector to absorb these risks – can end up exceeding a government’s ability to provide a credible fiscal backstop without adversely affecting the safety of its sovereign assets. The fiscal consequences of bailouts may result in increased sovereign risk and the loss of safe-asset status, with implications for the status of the currency in question in the international monetary system.

To increase the likelihood that sovereign assets remain safe during systemic events, the sovereign can undertake financial and fiscal reforms that decouple the fiscal state of the sovereign from banking crises. Such reforms should achieve, in part, a reduction in the likelihood of and need for bailouts through increased resilience and loss absorption capacity of the financial system, and by ensuring sufficient fiscal space for credible financial-sector support (see also Obstfeld 2013).

Reform initiatives

A number of current reform initiatives already take steps in this direction. These include:

  • Reforms to bank capital and liquidity regulation, which reduce the likelihood that financial institutions, and notably systemically important ones (SIFIs), become distressed;
  • Initiatives that seek to counteract the procyclicality of leverage, and to strengthen oversight; and
  • Recovery and resolution regimes for distressed systemically important financial institutions (SIFIs) are being improved.

Importantly, initiatives are underway to improve recovery and resolution in the international context. While a global agreement on cross-border bank resolution is currently not in place, bilateral agreements among some pairs of countries are being forged ex ante to facilitate lower-cost resolution ex post. Further, the resilience of the system as a whole is being strengthened, to better contain the systemic externalities of funding shocks. Examples include:

  • The strengthening of the resilience of central counterparties and other financial market infrastructures; and
  • The foreign currency swap arrangements among central banks to provide access to foreign currency funding liquidity at times when market prices of such liquidity are punishingly high.

Nevertheless, the financial system contains vulnerabilities – globally, as well as in individual currency areas. The negative sovereign banking feedback loop may be weakened in many countries, but has not been fully severed. Moreover, reforms are not necessarily evenly implemented across countries. Fiscal capacities to provide credible backstops of the financial sector during stress vary widely. The consequences of recent reforms for the future of key international currencies are therefore open. Scope remains for countries vying for reserve-currency status to use the tool of financial stability reform to protect the safety and liquidity of their sovereign assets from the contingent liabilities of financial systemic risk.

Financial stability reforms matter for spillovers and capital flows

International capital flows yield many advantages to home and host countries alike. Yet the international monetary system still faces potential challenges stemming from unanticipated volatility in flows, as well as occasionally disruptive spillovers of shocks in centre-country funding conditions to the periphery. With the events around the collapse of Lehman Brothers, disruption in dollar-denominated wholesale funding markets led to retrenchment of international lending activities. Capital flows to some emerging-market economies then recovered with a vengeance as investors searched for yield outside the countries central to the international monetary system, where interest rates were maintained at the zero lower bound. After emerging markets were buoyed by the influx of funds, outflows and repositioning occurred when markets viewed some of the expansionary policies in the US as more likely to be unwound.

While macroprudential measures – and in extreme cases, capital controls – are some of the policy options available for addressing the currently intrinsic vulnerabilities of some capital-flow recipient periphery countries (IMF 2012), we point out that these vulnerabilities can also be addressed in part by financial stability reforms in centre countries.

Consider, for example, the consequences of the regulatory reforms pertaining to international banks that are currently being proposed or implemented. Improvements in the underlying financial strength and loss-absorbing capacity of global banks could have the beneficial side-effect of reducing some of the negative spillovers associated with unanticipated volatility in international banking flows – especially those to emerging and developing economies. Empirical research suggests that better-capitalized financial institutions, and institutions with more stable funding sources and stronger liquidity management, adjust their balance sheets to a lesser degree when funding conditions tighten (Gambacorta and Mistrulli 2004, Kaplan and Minoiu 2013). The result extends to cross-border bank lending (Cetorelli and Goldberg 2011, Bruno and Shin 2013).

While financial stability reforms may reduce the externalities of centre-country funding conditions, they retain the features of international banking that promote efficient allocation of capital, risk sharing and effective financial intermediation. By enhancing the stability of global institutions and reducing some of the amplitude of the volatility of international capital flows, they may address some of the objections to the destabilising features of the current system.

Cross-border capital flows that take place outside of the global banking system have recently increased relative to banking flows (Shin 2013). Regulation of global banks does very little to address such flows, and may even push more flows toward the unregulated sector. At the same time, however, regulators are considering non-bank and non-insurer financial institutions as potential global systemically-important financial institutions (Financial Stability Board 2014).

Conclusions

We have argued that the policy and institutional frameworks for financial stability are important new determinants of the relative roles of currencies in the international monetary system. Financial stability reform enhances the safety of reserve assets, and may contribute indirectly to the stability of international capital flows. Of course, the ‘old’ drivers of reserve currencies continue to be influential. China’s progress in liberalising its capital account, and structural reforms to generate medium-term growth in the Eurozone – as examples of determinants of the future international roles of the renminbi and the euro relative to the US dollar – will continue to influence their international currency status. Our point is that such reforms will not be enough. The progress achieved on financial stability reforms in major currency areas will also greatly influence the future roles of their currencies.

Authors: Linda Goldberg, Vice President of International Research at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Signe Krogstrup, Assistant Director and Deputy Head of Monetary Policy Analysis, Swiss National Bank; Member of the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council on the International Monetary System

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11 Comments on "“The Financial System Is Vulnerable,” NYFed Asks “Could The Dollar Lose Its Reserve Status?”"

  1. Makati1 on Thu, 21st Aug 2014 9:23 am 

    The US is destroying all of the past support the USD had. The US is bankrupt. There is no gold in Fort Knox, and little in NYC. The social fabric is unraveling in the heartland. The Market Casino is full of worthless paper. Most retirement plans will never pay out. 47 million in soup lines and growing. Students over a trillion dollars in debt and not able to get a job. Homes and cars still being repossessed in record numbers. On and on…

    This is a propaganda piece from the Federal Reserve ‘for profit’ banksters. They know that the rest of the world has decided to attack the US’ weakest spot, the USD.

    All China has to do is back it’s currency with gold, which it has in abundance.

  2. Solarity on Thu, 21st Aug 2014 1:11 pm 

    “The related assets [to currency] must be useable with minimal transaction-price impact, and have relatively stable values in times of stress.”

    Until 2008, there was a direct correlation between crude oil production and US dollars in circulation (M3). This was a happenstance relationship because US sovereign controls very little oil, yet the tokens it issued generally represented oil as its primary reserve asset.

    OPEC prices their oil in US dollars. OPEC’s target price is based on analysis of a basket of commodities as delineated in USD. Until another currency can demonstrate stability among a broad base of such items, OPEC will continue to price in USD.

    BTW, since 2008, M3 and mbpd amounts have diverged: petroleum production is flat, but dollars have doubled.

  3. MSN Fanboy on Thu, 21st Aug 2014 3:33 pm 

    Makati: “All China has to do is back it’s currency with gold, which it has in abundance”….

    Oxymoronic statement.

    Gold isn’t abundant… that’s why we use it as a store of value. “Hint: Rare Metal”

    China may (obviously) have more gold than the USA. It doesn’t matter.

    America has the Black Gold… now that matters

  4. steve on Thu, 21st Aug 2014 5:37 pm 

    yes I have been hearing this story for so long…it may happen one day but that is the least of our worries….WW3 and peak oil are the two imminent worries for those of us alive today and for the next 10 years…

  5. Jimmy on Thu, 21st Aug 2014 7:08 pm 

    All China, Russia et al have to do is agree to trade with their business partners in a currency other than the USD. If they want to give the USA a hard time Russia and China could agree to purchase each others goods of one another and agree to use the Iranian Rial.

  6. Makati1 on Thu, 21st Aug 2014 9:12 pm 

    MSN, America has dreams and lies. The ‘black gold’ is mostly in their minds. Expand your news sources outside the US MSM and get a picture of the real world.

    Solarity, OPEC’s largest customer is now China. And they are already working on the switch to Yuan from USDs.

    Jimmy, you have the correct idea. The number of countries now trading outside the USD is growing daily. As that trade grows and the trade using USDs shrinks, the US economy will crumble.

    Steve, Peak oil is already past. WW3 is imminent, but the switch away from USDs is also underway. If it happens fast enough, it could prevent WW3 by destroying the Western economy that war is based on. When the governments have to use their troops to keep order inside their own borders, war will possibly be pushed out of the picture.

    WE live in very interesting times.

  7. JuanP on Fri, 22nd Aug 2014 10:01 am 

    Telesur English article about economic situation.
    http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/08/22/on-the-precipice-of-another-global-recession/

  8. shortonoil on Fri, 22nd Aug 2014 10:27 am 

    Solarity said:

    “Until 2008, there was a direct correlation between crude oil production and US dollars in circulation (M3).”

    In actuality that correlation began to breakdown about the year 2000. Our model indicates (as supported by the the graph shown below) that was the point where the total energy provided to the end user from petroleum stopped increasing. In essence, it was the point were real growth in the world’s economy halted. The monetary policies from the Greenspan era to the present has had two primary purposes:

    1) Increasing currency in circulation increases GDP (printing)
    2) Increasing currency in circulation and reducing interest rates raises asset prices, and allows the increased depreciation of existing assets to be indirectly booked as an increase in GDP.

    The FED, the creator, and owner of the dollar has two advantages in the race to maintain dollar hegemony.

    1) Since all central banks hold a huge number of dollars, an attack on the dollar reduces the value of their holdings.
    2) The dollar is an oil backed currency.

    Reducing the backing of the dollar reduces the value of the dollar, thus increasing the price of oil. Few importing nations could afford that. It seems doubtful that the dollar will loose its reserve status until petroleum losses its relevancy. By our time table that will be about 2030, when most exports of petroleum will have ceased (Jeffery Brown’s Export, Import Land Model) and the “average barrel” of petroleum is no longer capable of supplying energy to the end consumer (the Etp Model).

    http://www.thehillsgroup.org/depletion2_012.htm

    http://www.thehillsgroup.org/

  9. Davy on Fri, 22nd Aug 2014 10:30 am 

    Juan, great article. Europe is stair stepping to a depression with this triple dip recession described in the article. Triple dip recessions are a financial indicator of worse to come. How can Europe be so bold as to push aggressive Russian sanctions and face energy instability this winter? As elsewhere in the world this deflationary trip to a depression is masked by financial repression through debt, low interest rates, wealth transfer, market manipulation, and talking up confidence. It is anyone’s guess how long this will last. The trade war and Russian energy instability on the horizon is a bad omen. These types of economic situations are at the worst possible time for Europe. As the article goes on the rest of the world has its own messes which are little better than Europe. It is my opinion that this European contraction will propel Europe towards attitude and lifestyle changes before the rest of the world. Europe is already among the most efficient and sophisticated of global regions. If it can reduce immigration and continue with a declining population Europe is better place to manage the fall in the randomness of the descent paradigm we are entering. So, paradoxically this grim article on Europe is actually serendipitous.

  10. Northwest Resident on Fri, 22nd Aug 2014 11:24 am 

    “By our time table that will be about 2030…”

    And world population will have hit 8.321 billion in 2030 too, according to a study cited by Wikipedia.

    Both projections are based on things proceeding more or less according to plan, BAU all the way, no disasters, no financial meltdowns, no plagues, no wars, no water or food shortages, no nothin’.

    Short, I know in one previous post you said the chances of making it to 2030 without some kind of major world event interrupting that timeline — natural or manmade — was about zero percent. I think whenever you post the 2030 timeline, you should qualify it with “if the shit doesn’t hit the fan before then”, or perhaps more professionally, “if nothing rocks the boat along the way”. Most of us on this forum understand that is the unwritten and unspoken qualifier, but newbies might need a little extra help to understand the urgency of the matter.

    Just a friendly suggestion…

  11. shortonoil on Fri, 22nd Aug 2014 2:03 pm 

    @NR

    As I stated before, 2030 is the theoretical conclusion. It is like driving to the edge of a cliff. It is based on the laws of physics as applied to our ability to use petroleum. It is not an opinion, it is a “calculation”. It is the absolute, definitive end point.

    Yes, I have a personal “opinion” just like everyone else. Our chances “in my opinion” of us making it to to 2030 are probably on par with a snow ball in hell. But, that’s just my opinion.
    2030 I know!!!! Sooner, I believe is probably true.

    The calculations can be found at the site below:

    http://www.thehillsgroup.org/

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