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Originally posted by darksided
That would then lead to a panic selling of dollars on world foreign-exchange markets and collapse the role of the dollar as the reserve currency.
First, it should be noted the reason the US dollar is considered the PetroDollar is because the US agreed to assume the debt by recycling dollars into the London and New York banks for currency exchange
That process of recycling is where the term "Petrodollar" came from. In order for oil to trade in Euros, the Euro would have to be printed in great quantity for the exchange.
That is because the size of the publicly traded EU government-bond market is still tiny in comparison with the huge US Treasury market.
The reason the ECB, or even the EU, can't currently print Euro's to the levels required to support an oil bourse is because the Euro isn't backed by anything.
the world because it is backed by the F-16 standard, not the gold standard, and the F-16 standard is secured with strategic relationships with Saudi Arabia and several other OPEC nations.
These strategic relationships would have to be voided in order for OPEC to adopt a Euro standard for an oil bourse.
The U.S. sought to protect its dollar strength and hegemony by ensuring that Saudi Arabia price its oil only in dollars. To achieve this, the U.S. made a deal, some say a secret one, that it would protect the Saudi regime in exchange for their selling oil only in dollars.
Source. www.thirdworldtraveler.com...
When the dollar became the reserve currency for oil in the 80s, the dollar lost value as money was printed like crazy to compensate.
If Europe had to print massive sums of money, this would likely lead to a severe devalue of the Euro as a currency in relation to other world currencys.
One problem though, that means those banks would be putting all their chips in with Europe instead of the United States,
which means now Europe must back their currency or assume the risk.
In 2005, the United States backed the dollar as the worlds reserve currency to the tune of a military budget of $663 billion dollars.
Originally posted by Simon666
Originally posted by El Tiante
Additionally, America has 3x the growth, higher per capita GDP, a more productive work force and lower debt burden than the eu.
The Eu has a very slightly higher GDP (CIA factbook data), but do you have any debt figures? I'd be interested.
bellaciao.org...
Point #3 Bank Of America and Compass Bank managers (probably all other U.S. banks too) have been instructing their employees in the last few weeks on how to respond to customer demands in the event of a collapse of the U.S. economy - specifically telling the employees that only agents from the Department Of Homeland Security will have authority to decide what belongings customers may have from their safe deposit boxes - and that precious metals and other valuables will not be released to U.S. citizens. The bank employees have been strictly prohibited from revealing the banks’ new "guidelines" to anyone. (however, employees have been talking to friends and family)
www.teamliberty.net...
If these countries drop the dollar in favor of the euro and support the demise of the U.S. dollar as the international currency for global oil purchasing, America’s debt will end in default, the trade deficit will likely double, and the dollars that we carry in our wallets will be worth less, much less then they are right now. In the simplest terms, everything will appear to cost more because the dollar will be worth less.
In theory, the price of goods and services do not go up. It is actually the value of the dollar going down that causes economic insecurity and inflated prices at the cash register. Once the American people understand this important lesson regarding fiat money, change will be demanded in Washington DC.
Originally posted by Oilbourse2006
Actually I work in a building with Oil Prospectors, (Mediterranean Resources) and I happened to overhear a conversation they were having about this very topic, One person said that they had a financial advisor friend who advised to liquidate US assets and invest in Europe and the Far East. JC
Gold and metals fell sharply again Monday, with a slide in crude oil prices and a bounce in the dollar helping continue Friday's drop from stratospheric heights.
Gold for June delivery was recently losing $20.80 to $691 an ounce. The precious metal started declining on Friday after reaching $732, a level unseen since September 1980. It's now down 5.6% from that height.
Silver for July delivery was recently down 85 cents to $13.38 an ounce, after reaching a 25-year high at $14.93 last week. As for copper, the July contract was down 10.4 cents to $3.76 a pound, after last week touching a new all-time high at $4.04.
With most metals having advanced sharply -- without any meaningful pull-back -- since the start of the year, many analysts have warned of a pending correction.
"Certainly the gold market was overbought technically, after the recent run to 26-year highs, and therefore at least a portion of the setback this morning should be considered technical in nature," writes Nell Sloane, metals analyst at NSFutures.com.
An early trigger of metals weakness on Monday was a rebound in the dollar after news that foreign investors had bought enough U.S. stocks and bonds in March to cover the soaring current account deficit.
In addition, the Bank of Japan, concerned that a stronger yen might derail Japan's economic recovery, hinted that it might postpone plans to raise interest rates.
www.thestreet.com...
Originally posted by El Tiante
El Tiante, I'd recommend to stop using the CIA factbook, they aren't even able to properly do their intelligence duties, let alone financial analysises.
America has a lower debt burden
Originally posted by El Tiante
3x the growth and half the unemployment.
Originally posted by Oilbourse2006
Syria is changing to the Euro for Oil sales,
Iran is changing to the Euro for Oil Sales.
Iran is starting an Oil Exchange traded in Euros.
Russia says the US dollar is not stable and is slashing its USD reserves.
Originally posted by Violent
The very shipping lanes you are concerned with would be necessarily protected by the countries trading in the bourse. China, EU, Iran and other parties for their mutual economic benefit would have an inherent interest in keeping those shipping lanes open.
Originally posted by Mdv2
An assault on Iran would cause a lot of 'allied' casualties, but in the end the 'allied' force would (successfully) occupy the country, which is necessary to prevent Iran from fully changing from the Petro Dollar to the Petro Euro.
If they let Iran change to the Euro, the consequences for the US will be catastrophic.
China currently purchases 13% of its oil from Iran (in US Dollars). Besides, Iran and China recently signed a huge oil and gas trade agreement, of between 70-100 billion USD), and China doesn't care paying in Euros, like Iran demands.
With A Euro Oil bourse the general demand for Euros will increase swiftly, and more countries will automatically follow Iran's example
What does it mean? China is likely to increase it demand for Euros as they'll have to pay Iran with the particular currency. In contrast their demand for US Dollars will decrease rapidly, which makes it likely for them to decrease the current USD stocks.
The foreign debt holders keep the US economy running, when they start pulling out their capital and investments the US dollar, and thus its economy will collapse. This might be a real possibility if Iran will be successful in changing to the Euro.