Rumors are swirling that India and Iran are at the negotiating table right now, hammering out a deal to trade oil for gold. Why does that matter, you ask? Only because it strikes at the heart of both the value of the US dollar and today's high-tension standoff with Iran.
by Marin Katusa
Tehran Pushes to Ditch the US Dollar
Tehran Pushes to Ditch the US Dollar
The official line from the United States and the
European Union is that Tehran must be punished for continuing its efforts to
develop a nuclear weapon. The punishment: sanctions on Iran's oil exports, which
are meant to isolate Iran and depress the value of its currency to such a point
that the country crumbles.
But that line doesn't make sense, and the sanctions
will not achieve their goals. Iran is far from isolated and its friends – like
India – will stand by the oil-producing nation until the US either backs down
or acknowledges the real matter at hand. That matter is the American dollar and
its role as the global reserve currency.
The short version of the story is that a 1970s deal cemented the US dollar as the only currency to buy and sell crude oil, and from that monopoly on the all-important oil trade the US dollar slowly but surely became the reserve currency for global trades in most commodities and goods. Massive demand for US dollars ensued, pushing the dollar's value up, up, and away. In addition, countries stored their excess US dollars savings in US Treasuries, giving the US government a vast pool of credit from which to draw.
We know where that situation led – to a US government
suffocating in debt while its citizens face stubbornly high unemployment (due
in part to the high value of the dollar); a failed real estate market; record
personal-debt burdens; a bloated banking system; and a teetering economy. That
is not the picture of a world superpower worthy of the privileges gained from
having its currency back global trade. Other countries are starting to see that
and are slowly but surely moving away from US dollars in their transactions,
starting with oil.
If the US dollar loses its position as the global
reserve currency, the consequences for America are dire. A major portion of the
dollar's valuation stems from its lock on the oil industry – if that monopoly
fades, so too will the value of the dollar. Such a major transition in global
fiat currency relationships will bode well for some currencies and not so well
for others, and the outcomes will be challenging to predict. But there is one
outcome that we foresee with certainty: Gold will rise. Uncertainty around
paper money always bodes well for gold, and these are uncertain days indeed.
The Petrodollar System
To explain this situation properly, we have to start
in 1973. That's when President Nixon asked King Faisal of Saudi Arabia to
accept only US dollars as payment for oil and to invest any excess profits in
US Treasury bonds, notes, and bills. In exchange, Nixon pledged to protect
Saudi Arabian oil fields from the Soviet Union and other interested nations,
such as Iran and Iraq. It was the start of something great for the US, even if
the outcome was as artificial as the US real-estate bubble and yet constitutes
the foundation for the valuation of the US dollar.
By 1975 all of the members of OPEC agreed to sell
their oil only in US dollars. Every oil-importing nation in the world started
saving their surplus in US dollars so as to be able to buy oil; with such high
demand for dollars the currency strengthened. On top of that, many
oil-exporting nations like Saudi Arabia spent their US dollar surpluses on
Treasury securities, providing a new, deep pool of lenders to support US
government spending.
The "petrodollar" system was a brilliant
political and economic move. It forced the world's oil money to flow through
the US Federal Reserve, creating ever-growing international demand for both US
dollars and US debt, while essentially letting the US pretty much own the world's
oil for free, since oil's value is denominated in a currency that America
controls and prints. The petrodollar system spread beyond oil: the majority of
international trade is done in US dollars. That means that from Russia to
China, Brazil to South Korea, every country aims to maximize the US-dollar
surplus garnered from its export trade to buy oil.
The US has reaped many rewards. As oil usage increased
in the 1980s, demand for the US dollar rose with it, lifting the US economy to
new heights. But even without economic success at home the US dollar would have
soared, because the petrodollar system created consistent international demand
for US dollars, which in turn gained in value. A strong US dollar allowed
Americans to buy imported goods at a massive discount – the petrodollar system
essentially creating a subsidy for US consumers at the expense of the rest of
the world. Here, finally, the US hit on a downside: The availability of cheap
imports hit the US manufacturing industry hard, and the disappearance of
manufacturing jobs remains one of the biggest challenges in resurrecting the US
economy today.
There is another downside, a potential threat now lurking in the shadows. The value of the US dollar is determined in large part by the fact that oil is sold in US dollars. If that trade shifts to a different currency, countries around the world won't need all their US money. The resulting sell-off of US dollars would weaken the currency dramatically.
So here's an interesting thought experiment. Everybody
says the US goes to war to protect its oil supplies, but doesn't it really go
to war to ensure the continuation of the petrodollar system?
The Iraq war provides a good example. Until November
2000, no OPEC country had dared to violate the US dollar-pricing rule, and
while the US dollar remained the strongest currency in the world there was also
little reason to challenge the system. But in late 2000, France and a few other
EU members convinced Saddam Hussein to defy the petrodollar process and sell Iraq's
oil for food in euros, not dollars. In the time between then and the March 2003
American invasion of Iraq, several other nations hinted at their interest in
non-US dollar oil trading, including Russia, Iran, Indonesia, and even
Venezuela. In April 2002, Iranian OPEC representative Javad Yarjani was invited
to Spain by the EU to deliver a detailed analysis of how OPEC might at some
point sell its oil to the EU for euros, not dollars.
This movement, founded in Iraq, was starting to
threaten the dominance of the US dollar as the global reserve currency and
petro currency. In March 2003, the US invaded Iraq, ending the oil-for-food
program and its euro payment program.
There are many other historic examples of the US
stepping in to halt a movement away from the petrodollar system, often in
covert ways. In February 2011 Dominique Strauss-Kahn, managing director of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF), called for a new world currency to challenge
the dominance of the US dollar. Three months later a maid at the Sofitel New
York Hotel alleged that Strauss-Kahn sexually assaulted her. Strauss-Kahn was
forced out of his role at the IMF within weeks; he has since been cleared of
any wrongdoing.
War and insidious interventions of this sort may be
costly, but the costs of not protecting the petrodollar system would be far
higher. If euros, yen, renminbi, rubles, or for that matter straight gold, were
generally accepted for oil, the US dollar would quickly become irrelevant,
rendering the currency almost worthless. As the rest of the world realizes that
there are other options besides the US dollar for global transactions, the US
is facing a very significant – and very messy – transition in the global oil
machine.
The Iranian Dilemma
Iran may be isolated from the United States and
Western Europe, but Tehran still has some pretty staunch allies. Iran and
Venezuela are advancing $4 billion worth of joint projects, including a bank.
India has pledged to continue buying Iranian oil because Tehran has been a
great business partner for New Delhi, which struggles to make its payments.
Greece opposed the EU sanctions because Iran was one of very few suppliers that
had been letting the bankrupt Greeks buy oil on credit. South Korea and Japan are
pleading for exemptions from the coming embargoes because they rely on Iranian
oil. Economic ties between Russia and Iran are getting stronger every year.
Then there's China. Iran's energy resources are a
matter of national security for China, as Iran already supplies no less than
15% of China's oil and natural gas. That makes Iran more important to China
than Saudi Arabia is to the United States. Don't expect China to heed the US
and EU sanctions much – China will find a way around the sanctions in order to
protect two-way trade between the nations, which currently stands at $30
billion and is expected to hit $50 billion in 2015. In fact, China will
probably gain from the US and EU sanctions on Iran, as it will be able to buy
oil and gas from Iran at depressed prices.
So Iran will continue to have friends, and those
friends will continue to buy its oil. More importantly, you can bet they won't
be paying for that oil with US dollars. Rumors are swirling that India and Iran
are at the negotiating table right now, hammering out a deal to trade oil for
gold, supported by a few rupees and some yen. Iran is already dumping the
dollar in its trade with Russia in favor of rials and rubles. India is already
using the yuan with China; China and Russia have been trading in rubles and
yuan for more than a year; Japan and China are moving towards transactions in
yen and yuan.
And all those energy trades between Iran and China?
That will be settled in gold, yuan, and rial. With the Europeans out of the
mix, in short order none of Iran's 2.4 million barrels of oil a day will be
traded in petrodollars.
With all this knowledge in hand, it starts to seem
pretty reasonable that the real reason tensions are mounting in the Persian
Gulf is because the United States is desperate to torpedo this movement away
from petrodollars. The shift is being spearheaded by Iran and backed by India,
China, and Russia. That is undoubtedly enough to make Washington anxious enough
to seek out an excuse to topple the regime in Iran.
Speaking of that search for an excuse, this is
interesting. A team of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors
just visited Iran. The IAEA is supervising all things nuclear in Iran, and it
was an IAEA report in November warning that the country was progressing in its
ability to make weapons that sparked this latest round of international
condemnation against the supposedly near-nuclear state. But after their latest
visit, the IAEA's inspectors reported no signs of bomb making. Oh, and if
keeping the world safe from rogue states with nuclear capabilities were the
sole motive, why have North Korea and Pakistan been given a pass?
There is another consideration to keep in mind, one
that is very important when it comes to making some investment decisions based
on this situation: Russia, India, and China – three members of the rising
economic powerhouse group known as the BRICs (which also includes Brazil) – are
allied with Iran and are major gold producers. If petrodollars go out of vogue
and trading in other currencies gets too complicated, they will tap their gold
storehouses to keep the crude flowing. Gold always has and always will be the
fallback currency and, as mentioned before, when currency relationships start
to change and valuations become hard to predict, trading in gold is a tried and
true failsafe.
2012 might end up being most famous as the year in
which the world defected from the US dollar as the global currency of choice.
Imagine the rest of the world doing the math and, little by little, beginning
to do business in their own currencies and investing ever less of their
surpluses in US Treasuries. It constitutes nothing less than a slow but sure
decimation of the dollar.
That may not be a bad thing for the United States. The
country's gargantuan debts can never be repaid as long as the dollar maintains
anything close to its current valuation. Given the state of the country, all
that's really left supporting the value in the dollar is its global reserve
currency status. If that goes and the dollar slides, maybe the US will be able
to repay its debts and start fresh. That new start would come without the
privileges and ingrained subsidies to which Americans are so accustomed, but
it's amazing that the petrodollar system has lasted this long. It was only a
matter of time before something would break it down.
Finally, the big question: How can one profit from
this evolving situation? Playing with currencies is always very risky and, with
the global game set to shift to significantly, it would require a lot of
analysis and a fair bit of luck. The much more reliable way to play the game is
through gold. Gold is the only currency backed by a physical commodity; and it
is always where investors hide from a currency storm.
The basic conclusion is that a slow demise of the
petrodollar system is bullish for gold and very bearish for the US dollar.
No comments:
Post a Comment