The Fight Over the Future Dominate Currency Will Come Down to This

Derek HorstmeyerAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

To start the year, President Trump’s uncertain policy with respect to trading partners, paired with the expected increased debt load coming from the One Big Beautiful Bill, has renewed speculation among investors about the dollar’s supremacy around the world.

Accompany this uncertainty, we have seen the yield on U.S. long-term debt jump close to 5% and the U.S. dollar drop 10% in value. In tandem, these two things are never a good sign for the world’s reserve currency, and the developments have sparked new debates about the nature of the dollar as a safe haven asset.

Now, of course we have heard all this before — many arguments have been made in the past on how the euro would replace the dollar as the dominant currency in world trade or how BRICs would come together to challenge U.S. dollar supremacy. I will not repeat those arguments, but I will point out that one particular oft-overlooked capability will most likely determine the dominant currency in the future — the ability of a currency to preserve and protect the value of intangible assets into the future.

The rise of intangible assets

A currency traditionally has three dimensions: It acts as a medium of exchange, a unit of account, and a store of value. Each of these features of a currency have different importance throughout history. And, it is the third feature in a very specific form that will most likely be the crucial feature a currency will need to have to enjoy supremacy in a 21st-century world economy.