# Пов'язані статті щодо Dollar Hegemony

Центр новин HTX надає останні статті та поглиблений аналіз на тему "Dollar Hegemony", що охоплює ринкові тренди, оновлення проєктів, технологічні розробки та регуляторну політику в криптоіндустрії.

Iran's Impact on the Dollar: The Perfect Storm of Petrodollars

The report analyzes the profound impact of the Iran conflict on the petrodollar system, the cornerstone of dollar hegemony since 1974. It argues that the system, where global oil purchases in dollars lead to surplus recycling into U.S. Treasuries, is under unprecedented strain from three layers of pressure: pre-existing structural cracks, new shocks from the conflict, and the long-term threat of energy transition. Key structural cracks include the U.S. no longer being the primary buyer of Middle Eastern oil due to its shale revolution, Saudi Arabia's push for defense autonomy, the development of alternative payment infrastructure like Project mBridge, and sanctions driving de-dollarization. The conflict itself is damaging U.S. security credibility, shifting control of the Strait of Hormuz, and potentially forcing a shift to yuan-for-oil arrangements. The analysis details five complex mechanisms linking oil prices and U.S. Treasury yields, which can push in opposite directions. Crucially, the old logic is failing: oil producers, damaged by conflict, may become net sellers of U.S. debt to fund reconstruction, just as U.S. fiscal deficits and debt supply surge. While short-term buffers exist, like U.S. energy independence, the long-term trend points towards a world with less dollar dominance. The core conclusion is that a world focused on defense and energy self-sufficiency will inherently hold fewer dollar reserves, signaling a slow but structural decline in the petrodollar system.

marsbit04/13 10:01

Iran's Impact on the Dollar: The Perfect Storm of Petrodollars

marsbit04/13 10:01

Understanding JPMorgan Chase: The Enforcer of Dollar Hegemony, the Temple of Banking, and Bitcoin's Most Stubborn Opponent

J.P. Morgan Chase stands as a titan in the global financial system, often regarded as the enforcer of dollar hegemony and a神殿级银行 (temple-level bank). Its pivotal role in dollar clearing—processing over $10 trillion daily—grants it unparalleled influence over global capital flows. While it has selectively partnered with compliant crypto entities like Coinbase, providing crucial banking access that legitimized their operations, the bank remains a staunch critic of Bitcoin. CEO Jamie Dimon has consistently dismissed Bitcoin as a “fraud” and emphasized its use in illicit activities. The bank’s historical significance is profound. Founded by J.P. Morgan, who acted as a de facto central banker during the 1907 crisis, its modern incarnation is a cornerstone of the U.S. financial infrastructure, integral to Treasury operations and crisis management. Its stringent compliance standards make a J.P. Morgan account a coveted symbol of trust and access. Yet, it faces a paradigm shift from decentralized finance. Tether’s USDT has emerged as a “shadow competitor,” creating a parallel system for dollar transactions that bypasses traditional banking channels. In response, J.P. Morgan is exploring its own blockchain solutions, like JPM Coin, aiming to integrate the efficiency of distributed ledger technology while maintaining control within the regulated financial framework. The tension between its centralized power and the rise of decentralized alternatives defines its complex relationship with the crypto world.

marsbit01/20 03:06

Understanding JPMorgan Chase: The Enforcer of Dollar Hegemony, the Temple of Banking, and Bitcoin's Most Stubborn Opponent

marsbit01/20 03:06

Financial On-Chain Transformation: A Blueprint for the Overhaul of the U.S. Capital Market

The article "Financial On-Chaining: A Blueprint for the Transformation of U.S. Capital Markets" explores the potential systemic overhaul if the U.S. financial system migrates to blockchain technology, as suggested by SEC Chair Paul Atkins. It outlines seven key structural shifts: 1. Market Dynamics: Transition to T+0 settlement, enabling 24/7 trading and real-time regulatory oversight by the SEC, increasing capital velocity but eliminating traditional market buffers. 2. Banking Sector: Banks would operate with near-transparent balance sheets, reducing risks like asset-liability mismatches but potentially accelerating bank runs. Programmable collateral could unlock new financing efficiency. 3. Real Economy: Democratization of assets through fractional ownership and "micro-IPOs" for SMEs, injecting liquidity premium into U.S. assets. 4. Geopolitics: Digital reinforcement of dollar dominance via tokenized Treasuries and money market funds, attracting global capital through efficiency and transparency. 5. Risk Evolution: Systemic risks would shift from human-driven panics to technical failures (e.g., smart contract bugs, oracle manipulation), making crises faster and more technical. 6. Winners and Losers: Infrastructure builders, new asset managers, and hybrid talent would thrive; traditional intermediaries and opaque industries would decline. 7. Realistic Timeline: Full adoption in two years is unlikely due to technical, legal, and political hurdles, but gradual implementation (e.g., in Treasuries, repos) is inevitable as efficiency drives change.

比推12/09 08:30

Financial On-Chain Transformation: A Blueprint for the Overhaul of the U.S. Capital Market

比推12/09 08:30

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