Wells Fargo has predicted how long the US dollar will remain the world’s reserve currency amid the BRICS de-dollarization efforts. The 10-member alliance is pushing local currencies for trade and settling cross-border transactions without the US dollar. The dependency on the greenback is reducing, as new trade policies are being signed incorporating the Chinese yuan, Russian ruble, and Indian rupee.

BRICS is adding pressure on the US dollar’s prospects, and Wells Fargo is closely monitoring the situation. In a note to clients, the investment bank forecasted that the USD’s dependency is dipping, but its throne remains intact. The greenback is still in power, as the bank revealed that the world is yet to find an alternative currency replacing it as the global reserve.

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BRICS: How Long Will the US Dollar Remain the World’s Reserve Currency? Wells Fargo Answers

US Dollar Bills Notes
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After monitoring the BRICS de-dollarization efforts, Wells Fargo wrote that the US dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency is safe and secure. They wrote in the note that foreign exchange managers receive limited demand for other currencies while the US dollar dominates. The US-based government bonds, currency, and stocks are high in demand while other countries’ denominations are minimal.

Therefore, Wells Fargo wrote that the US dollar’s supremacy as the reserve currency will continue even with the BRICS onslaught. “Taking these factors into account, we see limited alternatives for FX reserve managers to US government bonds and, accordingly, view the US dollar’s status as the global reserve currency as secure for the foreseeable future,” the bank wrote.

The challenge to the US dollar is strong, but BRICS cannot undo decades’ worth of economic work, wrote Wells Fargo. Unless a local currency is a real threat and a challenge to the greenback, the USD’s reign will continue. The US dollar will remain supreme, and its place is sealed at the top for years, if not decades.