China just dropped an absolute bombshell, entirely ignored by the mainstream media in the United States. The central bank of China has decided that it is “no longer in China’s favor to accumulate foreign-exchange reserves”. So in other words – China sees little need to continue “hoarding” USD as they have in the past ( in order to keep their own currency suppressed ) and is likely to stop purchasing U.S Debt as well.
As well China also announced last week ( again – completely ignored in mainstream media ) that they will soon look to price crude oil in Yuan on the Shanghai Futures Exchange, bypassing the need for exchange in USD.
The implications and ramifications are massive.
- China is now the number one importer of oil in the world, and will soon openly challenge use of the petrodollar.
- Dropping the purchases of U.S denominated debt leaves only the The Fed (as no one else in there right mind is buying U.S Treasuries ) so we can likely expect further downside in bond prices…and of course the dreaded inverse – rise in interest rates.
- When China starts dumping dollars and U.S denominated debt, it’s pretty safe to say the rest of the world will too.
- Allowing the Yuan to in turn “appreciate in value” will make all those wonderfully cheap products sold in The United States much more expensive.
In all….this is likely the largest , most significant story / issue now facing the U.S as China’s “backstop” to the U.S Dollar and never-ending purchases of U.S Debt “until now” have been primary drivers in supporting “whatever it is you call this” economic recovery.
Pulling the rug on U.S Dollar and debt purchases is without a doubt the move that “takes the queen”.
Checkmate next.
The Domino Effect: What Happens When the Dollar’s Foundation Crumbles
Currency War Escalation: USD/CNY and the New Reality
The USD/CNY pair is about to become the most watched currency cross on the planet. For decades, China artificially suppressed the Yuan by maintaining a peg around 6.20-6.90 to the dollar, but those days are numbered. When China stops intervening to weaken their currency, we’re looking at a potential appreciation that could see USD/CNY drop below 6.00 for the first time in years. This isn’t just a technical break – it’s a fundamental shift in global monetary policy that will ripple through every major currency pair. The Dollar Index (DXY) has been artificially propped up by China’s currency manipulation, and without that support, we’re staring at a potential collapse below the critical 90 level that could trigger a wholesale flight from dollar-denominated assets.
Smart money is already positioning for this reality. The carry trade strategies that have dominated forex markets for the past decade are about to get turned on their head. When the Yuan strengthens, it’s not just USD/CNY that gets hammered – every dollar cross becomes vulnerable. EUR/USD could easily blast through 1.25 and keep climbing, while GBP/USD might finally break free from its post-Brexit malaise. The Swiss Franc and Japanese Yen, traditional safe havens, will likely surge as investors flee dollar exposure across all asset classes.
The Petro-Yuan: Destroying Dollar Hegemony One Barrel at a Time
China’s move to price oil in Yuan on the Shanghai Futures Exchange isn’t just about convenience – it’s economic warfare disguised as market innovation. The petrodollar system has been the backbone of American financial dominance since Nixon took us off the gold standard in 1971. Every barrel of oil traded in dollars creates artificial demand for U.S. currency, allowing America to export inflation and maintain artificially low interest rates. When China starts settling oil trades in Yuan, they’re not just challenging the dollar – they’re offering the world an exit strategy from American monetary policy.
The mathematics are brutal. China imports over 10 million barrels of oil per day, and if even half of those transactions shift to Yuan settlement, we’re talking about removing billions in daily dollar demand from global markets. Russia has already signaled willingness to accept Yuan for energy exports, and Iran is desperate for any alternative to dollar-based sanctions. Once this snowball starts rolling, oil exporters from Venezuela to Nigeria will have no choice but to follow suit or risk losing access to the world’s largest energy market.
Bond Market Carnage: When the Fed Becomes the Only Buyer
The bond market is about to experience what economists politely call “price discovery” – and it’s going to be ugly. China has been the marginal buyer keeping U.S. Treasury yields artificially suppressed, holding over $1 trillion in U.S. government debt. When they stop rolling over maturing bonds and start actively reducing their holdings, the Federal Reserve will be forced into permanent quantitative easing just to prevent a complete collapse in bond prices. The 10-year Treasury yield, currently hovering around these historically low levels, could easily spike above 4% or even 5% as real price discovery kicks in.
This creates a nightmare scenario for the Fed. Higher yields mean higher borrowing costs for the government, which means either massive spending cuts or even more money printing to service existing debt. It’s a death spiral that ends with currency collapse or hyperinflation – possibly both. Corporate bonds will get absolutely destroyed as risk premiums explode, and the housing market will crater as mortgage rates follow Treasury yields higher. The everything bubble that’s been inflated by artificially low rates is about to meet the pin of market reality.
Trading the Collapse: Positioning for the Post-Dollar World
Professional traders need to start thinking beyond traditional dollar-based strategies. The Yuan is becoming a reserve currency whether Western central banks acknowledge it or not, and commodity currencies like the Australian Dollar and Canadian Dollar will benefit from increased trade settlement outside the dollar system. Gold is obvious, but silver might offer even better returns as industrial demand from China’s green energy transition combines with monetary debasement fears.
The volatility in major currency pairs is going to be extraordinary. Risk management becomes paramount when fundamental assumptions about global monetary policy are shifting in real time. Position sizing needs to account for gap risk and sudden central bank interventions as governments desperately try to maintain some semblance of orderly markets. This isn’t just another market cycle – it’s the beginning of a new monetary era.


