Skip to main content
Boston Employee homeNews home
Story

Dollar keeps losing market share but euro slow to benefit: ECB study

Reuters

2 min read

FRANKFURT (Reuters) -The dollar continued to lose market share as the world's dominant currency last year but mostly smaller rivals and gold benefited rather than the euro, an ECB report showed on Wednesday.

However, an acceleration in the selling of dollar assets since April because of erratic U.S. economic policy provides an opportunity for the single currency, ECB President Christine Lagarde has said, provided the 20-nation bloc finally pushes ahead with key integration steps including joint borrowing.

In 2024 alone, the dollar lost 2 percentage points from its share of global foreign exchange holdings and while the euro made small gains, the Japanese yen and the Canadian dollar were the big winners, the ECB said on Wednesday.

Although the dollar still had a 58% market share of global foreign exchange reserves by end-2024, this is down by 10 percentage points in the past decade. Meanwhile, the euro's share has hovered at just below a fifth.

Another big winner last year was gold, with central banks increasing their stock by more than 1,000 metric tons, a record pace and double the average annual level seen in the previous decade, the ECB said.

"Survey data suggest that two-thirds of central banks invested in gold for purposes of diversification, while two-fifths did so as protection against geopolitical risk," it said.

When all foreign reserves are added together, gold accounted for 20%, and the euro 16%, the ECB added.

However, there have been signs since April that euro assets may finally be benefiting.

Treasury yields have risen but the dollar has weakened sharply against the euro, a highly unusual correlation which appears to suggest that investors are questioning the dollar's status as the world's premier asset and demanding a higher risk premium to hold U.S. assets.

JOINT DEBT

The euro zone, however, lacks a truly liquid, large-scale safe asset since debt is issued by individual countries, leaving the bloc's debt market fragmented unless more joint bonds are issued.

Renowned economists Olivier Blanchard and Angel Ubide recently proposed that European countries create separate revenue streams to repay joint 'blue' bonds and national 'red' ones.

"The conditions today are far more favourable, especially if the scale of blue bond issuance were to be calibrated in a prudent manner," ECB chief economist Philip Lane said on Wednesday.

He also revived his own proposal for a synthetic euro zone bond, effectively a portfolio of different government bonds sold in tranches.