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Euro’s status languishes as dollar still king after 25 years

While the fall in euro usage and corresponding jump in dollar dominance may have been overdone last year, any correction is likely to be modest until the geopolitical air clears. Some of the loss of status and relevance for the euro will be permanent

January 24, 2024 / 14:26 IST
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While the fall in euro usage and corresponding jump in dollar dominance may have been overdone last year.

The euro celebrates 25 years of virtual existence this month, with its digital creation in 1999 followed by the introduction of physical notes and coins in  2002. It's embedded successfully as the domestic means of exchange within the 20-nation euro zone. While its survival is no longer threatened, the common currency has made little progress in its broader aim of challenging the dollar's role as the world’s reserve currency — and has instead gone backward.

De-dollarisation is a perennial theme, but the greenback remains king. The use of the euro in SWIFT transactions — the main global system for cross-border payments — fell to 22 percent by the end of last year from 38 percent in January. The dollar took a corresponding leap, with usage climbing to 48 percent from 40 percent. Most of this was due to a change in market practice when SWIFT changed its calculation method to more accurately measure commercial bank data sent to the European Central Bank; but the common currency has failed to fulfill the aspirations of its founders.

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It's worth noting that usage of "other" currencies also rose, to 15 percent from 10 percent during 2023. The Chinese yuan edged up to a 4 percent share, just pushing into the fourth spot ahead of the Japanese yen, with sterling staying in third place. Change is afoot, though — global payment flows may no longer be comprehensively captured in SWIFT data.

Bilateral trade between China and Russia and the rest of the BRICS+ confederation is hard to assess, but the potential for an increase is clearly there. Kit Juckes, chief currency strategist at Societe Generale SA, told me the real story is about fragmentation. He reckons it's becoming much harder to get an accurate reading of the data, but expects over time the disruption from the pandemic and heightened geopolitical woes will lead to less trade occurring in both dollars and euros.