The greenback's dominance in global finance is quietly eroding. Central banks are now holding USD-denominated assets at just 57% of their foreign exchange reserves—marking the lowest share in over three decades. This structural shift reflects growing diversification away from traditional dollar holdings, signaling broader changes in international monetary dynamics that ripple through markets, including implications for alternative asset classes.
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GasFeeVictim
· 01-05 23:58
Is the US dollar dominance about to collapse? 57% is considered low, and more efforts are needed. The central banks' recent moves are definitely warming up the altcoins, let's wait and see how things develop next.
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MEVSandwichMaker
· 01-05 13:36
The dollar reserves have dropped to 57%? Now this is interesting, central banks are finally serious about de-dollarization... How to say, it should have happened a long time ago.
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The feeling that non-US assets are about to take off, that previous surge was not in vain.
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After all, the Federal Reserve can't control this trend, it's hilarious.
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Wow, the lowest in over thirty years... This time it's definitely not a scare tactic.
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The word diversification sounds comfortable, but in reality, it's just dumping the dollar.
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This wave of alternative assets should have some play, finally it's our turn.
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ReverseFOMOguy
· 01-04 20:57
The US dollar's position is dropping rapidly, and central banks are quietly reducing their holdings... Now the crypto world should be excited.
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ShamedApeSeller
· 01-03 00:52
The dominance of the US dollar is loosening, and this should have happened a long time ago. Central banks collectively fleeing to other assets... what does it indicate? The post-dollar era has truly arrived, and crypto is about to take off.
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RektRecorder
· 01-03 00:48
Dollar reserves drop to 57%? Well, this is interesting. Are the central banks finally waking up... To be honest, they should have anti-dollar long ago. They've been playing financial games for so long, and now they finally think of diversification? So slow.
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ETHmaxi_NoFilter
· 01-03 00:48
The US dollar keeps falling... The 57% figure is a bit scary, the first time in thirty years, central banks are really collectively dumping the dollar.
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Wait, isn't this what we've been saying about de-dollarization? Finally, there's data to support it.
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Not gonna lie, this should be a long-term positive for BTC and ETH. The loosening of dollar hegemony = the time for alt assets to take off has arrived.
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Damn, central banks have finally woken up; the dollar is no longer attractive.
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The lowest in thirty years... No wonder all kinds of coins are stirring, the market has sensed the shift of power.
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RektCoaster
· 01-03 00:44
Is the dominance of the US dollar really coming to an end? Central banks are starting to ditch the dollar... This is getting interesting. Is the altcoin season about to begin?
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ProtocolRebel
· 01-03 00:40
The US dollar is gradually falling from its pedestal, and central banks are quietly reducing their holdings. This is the real big event.
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GateUser-a606bf0c
· 01-03 00:39
The US dollar reserves have dropped to 57%, and this time there's really no pretending anymore. Central banks are quietly shifting their positions; they should have reacted earlier.
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ImaginaryWhale
· 01-03 00:27
Is the dominance of the US dollar really declining? The 57% figure says it all... Central banks are starting to ditch the dollar, and alternative assets are about to take off.
The greenback's dominance in global finance is quietly eroding. Central banks are now holding USD-denominated assets at just 57% of their foreign exchange reserves—marking the lowest share in over three decades. This structural shift reflects growing diversification away from traditional dollar holdings, signaling broader changes in international monetary dynamics that ripple through markets, including implications for alternative asset classes.