- India is firming up plans with the United Arab Emirates to settle bilateral transactions in their local currencies
- China celebrated a record-high 49.1% of cross-border payments and receipts transacted in yuan in the first half of 2022
- Indonesia announced expansion of its local currency settlement with central banks in South Korea and Australia
- Southeast Asian issuers sold local-currency debt at a record pace through the first three quarters of the year
- Central bank in Laos reportedly barred commercial banks from selling foreign currencies
While all these measures may have a limited market impact short term, the end result may be an eventual weakening of demand for the dollar. The Canadian dollar and Chinese yuan’s shares of all currency trades, for instance, are already slowly edging higher.
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