- Quietly but with malice, OPEC cartel nations have been
dumping the U.S. dollar over the past three years, according to the Bank
for International Settlements (BIS).
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- The dollar has been falling dramatically in recent years
-- reaching new lows against the Euro and other currencies.
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- One key culprit may be OPEC states who have traditionally
denominated their transactions in U.S. dollars -- but are now moving to
the Euro in what the BIS says is a "subtle but noticeable" shift.
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- OPEC's actions may have been precipated by Sept. 11 and
the Bush administation's "war on terrror" -- a war hotly opposed
by almost all OPEC nations.
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- BIS data reveals that OPEC states have reduced their
dollar deposits from 75 per cent in the third quarter of 2001 to 61.5 per
cent today -- a fall of of some 13 percentage points.
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- "Since the third quarter of 2001, oil revenue seems
to have been channeled increasingly into euro and other currency deposits,"
the bank said. "This shift out of U.S. dollars probably reflected
to some extent the relative change in interest rates in the United States
and the euro area since 1998."
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- The Financial Times also reported Monday that OPEC nations
are also moving away from pricing oil in dollars.
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- The move away from the dollar could prove catastrophic
for U.S. economic interests and bring to an end to more than a half century
of dollar supremacy around the globe.
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- The FT suggested the shift by OPEC was due to "private
Middle East investors" who are "worried about the prospect of
US-held assets being frozen as part of the war on terror, leading to accelerated
dollar-selling after the re-election of President George W. Bush."
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- Hans Redeker, global head of foreign exchange strategy
at the French bank BNP Paribas, blamed the U.S. Patriot Act.
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- "If you trade with what the US regards as a 'dodgy'
bank, you are at risk of your assets in the US being frozen," he said.
"After the re-election of George Bush, the Middle East started to
sell dollars like crazy due to the fears of assets being frozen."
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- The effect of the move away from the dollar has left
the U.S. financial interests with a black eye.
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- Critics of the European Union have suggested that the
introduction of the common currency known as the Euro was an effort to
weaken the dollar's supremacy and to steal the OPEC account from the U.S.
dollar.
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- These claims may be justified with the latest data from
the Bank for International Settlements.
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- http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/12/6/211118.shtml
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