Dollar Loses Ground in Global Reserves, but Stays on Top; Gold Ousts Euro for No. 2 Spot

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Dollar Loses Ground in Global Reserves, but Stays on Top; Gold Ousts Euro for No. 2 Spot

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The greenback’s share dips to 58 percent, while gold climbs to 2nd place with 20 percent in total reserve holdings, displacing the euro at 16 percent.

Dollar Loses Ground in Global Reserves, but Stays on Top; Gold Ousts Euro for No. 2 Spot

People walk past a currency exchange shop in Istanbul on June 23, 2023. Chris McGrath/Getty Images

Tom Ozimek

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The U.S. dollar continued to lose ground in 2024 as the world’s dominant reserve currency—but it was gold, not the euro, that capitalized most on the shift, according to a June 11 report from the European Central Bank (ECB).

Investor appetite for dollar-denominated assets weakened notably beginning in April, amid growing concerns over erratic U.S. trade policy and long-term fiscal sustainability. ECB president Christine Lagarde described the moment as a potential inflection point—an opening for the euro to establish itself as a credible alternative to the dollar, provided the 20-member eurozone can finally deliver long-promised reforms to deepen financial and capital market integration.

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