I just saw an interesting ranking, and it turns out that the world's highest-valued national currency is not the US dollar😲 Kuwait Dinar ranks first, which I really didn't expect. I heard that the reason it's so valuable is mainly because Kuwait has extremely abundant oil reserves, and its economic foundation is rock solid.



Then, the currencies of Middle Eastern countries like Bahrain, Oman, and Jordan also rank quite high, mostly supported by oil and pegged to the US dollar. Further down the list, traditional strong currencies like the British Pound and Swiss Franc appear, with the Euro in 9th place and the US dollar actually at the bottom in 10th place.

It feels a bit counterintuitive; I always thought the US dollar was the strongest, but looking at the countries with the highest currency values, the dollar doesn't even make the list. This ranking mainly considers the face value of the unit currency, not purchasing power or reserve volume. Have you ever paid attention to the currencies of these highest-valued countries? Isn't it surprising that the ranking is like this?
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