The U.S. Dollar Remains the Preferred Choice of Official Foreign Exchange Reserves
Currencies / US Dollar Apr 10, 2012 - 03:18 AM GMTThe IMF’s Currency Composition of Official Foreign Exchange Reserves (COFER) database continues to indicate that dollar remains the preferred reserve currency. In the fourth quarter of 2011, the dollar made up 62.1% of official reserves vs. 61.8% in the third quarter. The dollar accounted for 61.4% of official reserves in 2011 vs. 61.8% in 2010 and 62% in 2009.
The euro’s share was virtually unchanged in 2011 at 26%. The small dip in the dollar’s share was taken over by “other currencies” component of the IMF’s categories. Mr. Derrick of BNY Mellon has identified the Aussie dollar as the beneficiary. It is also noteworthy that the euro’s share has decline to 25.94% in 2011 from 27.66% in 2009. Is the dollar’s role as an official reserve currency shrinking? A small decline is visible prior to the onset of the crisis but the dollar has prevailed in the past three years (see Chart 1).
Asha Bangalore — Senior Vice President and Economist
http://www.northerntrust.com
Asha Bangalore is Vice President and Economist at The Northern Trust Company, Chicago. Prior to joining the bank in 1994, she was Consultant to savings and loan institutions and commercial banks at Financial & Economic Strategies Corporation, Chicago.
Copyright © 2011 Asha Bangalore
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