K.S. Rajan (17 Aug 2014)
"SNUBBING OBAMA, RUSSIA AND CHINA SIGN HISTORIC DEAL TO BYPASS THE U.S. DOLLAR"
SNUBBING OBAMA, RUSSIA AND CHINA SIGN HISTORIC DEAL TO BYPASS THE U.S. DOLLAR
NTEB News Desk | August 11, 2014 | 38 Comments
A FAILED RUSSIA ‘RESET’ CONTINUES TO HAUNT OBAMA
“The sanctions we put in place against Russia are working as intended” – Barack Obama, August 6, 2014
In the summer of 2009, two dozen statesmen from Central and Eastern
Europe issued a joint appeal for President Barack Obama not to forget
the lessons of recent history. The White House had just rolled out its
“reset” in relations with Russia as a centerpiece of Obama’s foreign
policy. Flash-forward to 2014, and that reset, that “daring gamble” has
proved to be yet another in a series of colossal failures of the Obama
foreign policy. And now, it gets worse. Much worse.
Russia held it’s annual economic summit in St. Petersburg a week ago,
and a number of insanely-interesting things have come out of that
meeting. Not the least of which is the joint cooperation pact that
Russia signed with China to step away from the U.S. dollar and promote
their own currencies between themselves. Ouchies, Mr. Obama, guess those
sanctions you put on Russia is really crippling them, huh?
russia-china-sign-agreement-cooperation-deal-bypass-us-dollar-united-states-debt
“Our two countries have done a huge job to reach a new historic
landmark,” Putin said on Tuesday in St. Petersburg regarding his “new
deal” with China
“These actions, taken in the context of many other actions around the
world including Saudi Arabia’s frustration with U.S. foreign policy
toward Iran, and China’s voracious appetite for gold, these actions are
meaningful steps away from the dollar,” Jim Rickards, portfolio manager
at West Shore Group and partner at Tangent Capital Partners, told CNBC
via email.
Meanwhile, VTB, Russia’s second biggest bank, has signed a deal with
Bank of China that includes an agreement to pay each other in domestic
currencies. Added to this, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev spoke
on Russian TV over the weekend saying sanctions imposed on the country
by the EU and U.S. would make Russia use the ruble for trade and would
eventually turn it from a “convertible into a reserve currency.”
With the two developing nations trading outside of the U.S. dollar, many
questions are being raised about what this would do for the greenback
and for the U.S. The dollar’s status as the global reserve currency has
allowed the U.S. to borrow large sums of money, effectively living
beyond its means, because there is always a demand for its currency.
China has become the largest holder of U.S. debt. Its authorities hold
around $3.8 trillion of reserves, the majority of which is denominated
in U.S. dollars. However, they have expressed a desire to diversify away
from the greenback, and have already pared back their U.S. Treasury
holdings