True, power shifts always create pressure in different parts of the world, we can already see that happening. But honestly, I still feel de-dollarisation is a slow economic shift rather than something that triggers a big global conflict. The US will obviously try to hold its position, but the world is too tangled together now, and too many regions are already dealing with their own problems, for it to blow up the way it might have decades ago. To me it looks more like a long, messy transition than a sudden clash.
The write up is good.... would be nice to explain the real reason of Dollar dominance in Trade and Reserves..... why other currencies are not able to ramp up the same .....
Thanks for reading and for sharing this point....it is actually the heart of the whole topic. The dollar didn’t become dominant overnight. It happened because the world slowly started trusting it more than anything else: stable economy, predictable policy, and a bond market so deep that every country can park money without worrying about liquidity. Most global trade contracts were written in USD decades ago, and once a system becomes the “default,” it is very hard for others to replace it. Other currencies do try, but they struggle with consistency, transparency, and long-term reliability. Countries don’t just need a currency; they need a system they can trust during crises. That is where the dollar still wins.
You are right, de-dollarisation is definitely happening, and the shift is visible. But personally, I feel it is moving in a very slow, uneven way. Countries want alternatives, but when things get shaky, they still prefer the dollar because it is familiar and predictable. That “trust gap” is the part that takes decades to change. So yes, the dollar’s share might keep slipping, but I don’t think its central role disappears anytime soon. It just becomes a little less dominant than before. And I agree with you on gold and silver....whenever the world diversifies away from one currency, people naturally look toward assets that don’t depend on any government…..It is a slow transition, but a very interesting one to watch.
When USA notes de-dollarisation is notable, then it would start the 3rd world war and put itself back on the pivot.
That is what is happening right now. Trump is just a mouthpiece, and the decisions are backed by the Illuminati.
True, power shifts always create pressure in different parts of the world, we can already see that happening. But honestly, I still feel de-dollarisation is a slow economic shift rather than something that triggers a big global conflict. The US will obviously try to hold its position, but the world is too tangled together now, and too many regions are already dealing with their own problems, for it to blow up the way it might have decades ago. To me it looks more like a long, messy transition than a sudden clash.
True
2022 - Russia Attacked Ukraine
2023 - Israel Attacked Palestin
2025 - USA attacked Iran
2026 - Pakistan attacked Afghanistan
2026 - USA attacked Iran for the 2nd time in 8 months.
More attacks are anticipated and split into 2 groups, and that is the 3rd world war.
So 3rd world wars 1st phase started in 2022.
It would take a decade or more to BOOM and BUST.
2 Agendas are on the list:
1. Depopulization.
2. US $ back to pivot.
The write up is good.... would be nice to explain the real reason of Dollar dominance in Trade and Reserves..... why other currencies are not able to ramp up the same .....
Thanks for reading and for sharing this point....it is actually the heart of the whole topic. The dollar didn’t become dominant overnight. It happened because the world slowly started trusting it more than anything else: stable economy, predictable policy, and a bond market so deep that every country can park money without worrying about liquidity. Most global trade contracts were written in USD decades ago, and once a system becomes the “default,” it is very hard for others to replace it. Other currencies do try, but they struggle with consistency, transparency, and long-term reliability. Countries don’t just need a currency; they need a system they can trust during crises. That is where the dollar still wins.
Dedollarization is happening. Slowly but surely. Market share of worldwide transaction in dollar is declining. It is good for gold and silver.
You are right, de-dollarisation is definitely happening, and the shift is visible. But personally, I feel it is moving in a very slow, uneven way. Countries want alternatives, but when things get shaky, they still prefer the dollar because it is familiar and predictable. That “trust gap” is the part that takes decades to change. So yes, the dollar’s share might keep slipping, but I don’t think its central role disappears anytime soon. It just becomes a little less dominant than before. And I agree with you on gold and silver....whenever the world diversifies away from one currency, people naturally look toward assets that don’t depend on any government…..It is a slow transition, but a very interesting one to watch.