King dollar risks losing its crown to an Asian mutiny
Asian nations are quietly challenging the dollar's global dominance, moving beyond mere rhetoric. China's digital yuan (e-CNY) now offers interest, making it competitive with bank deposits. Meanwhile, the mBridge platform, a cross-border payment s...

Those searching for evidence of that uprising in payment flows are looking in the wrong place. For years to come, de-dollarization will remain hidden in additions and alterations to financial plumbing. The cumulative effects will take time to show.
With little fanfare, China’s e-CNY, the official digital currency, has gone from being interest-free cash to a yield-bearing product of commercial banks. It’s a profound change. Until now the problem with e-CNY adoption was that even the Chinese state workers who received their salaries as tokens in their e-wallets would immediately swipe them into their bank accounts. Now they don’t need to. For them, and their banks, e-CNY is no longer any different from a regular deposit account. Popular payment apps like Alipay and WeChat Pay work with both.
This maneuver won’t make a dent into the greenback’s current dominance: The dollar is the preferred global payments currency with a 50%-plus share, more than twice that of the euro, and way ahead of the yuan’s 3%. But an e-CNY that’s more widely used within China lowers the threat of further dollarization in a scenario where local savers switch to dollar stablecoins, 1:1 clones of the US currency traded on the blockchain. Paying interest on e-CNY is a defensive step because last year’s US Genius Act expressly prohibits stablecoin issuers from offering yields.
But a moat against stablecoins won’t be enough. To take on the dollar’s hegemony more directly, China will have to attack it overseas. But outside of Hong Kong, where banks are making yuan-denominated trade financing available to clients in Indonesia and Cambodia, there isn’t a deep enough pool of offshore liquidity in the Chinese currency.

There are reports that mBridge could morph into something larger. India, which has developed its own central bank digital currency, is looking to propose linking the CBDCs of so-called BRICS+ grouping of emerging markets, according to Reuters. The idea will be anathema to Washington. And since New Delhi has agreed to stop buying Russian oil to get out of the Trump administration’s tariff prison, it’s hard to say if its enthusiasm for a payments corridor that would also include Russia and Iran will endure.
Even if a viable anti-dollar coalition takes time to emerge, Beijing will keep pressing. A few years ago, President Xi Jinping’s emphasis on China’s need to build a “powerful currency” that’s “widely used in international trade, investment and foreign exchange markets, and attain reserve currency status” would have been dismissed by investors as empty boast.
That’s no longer the case. Markets are already questioning the dollar’s exceptionalism. Looking under the hood of what caused the unusual spike in US bond yields after President Donald Trump launched his tariff war, New York University professors Viral Acharya and Toomas Laarits conclude that “investors lost confidence specifically in the long-term safety properties of Treasuries while still valuing their near-term benefits.” They found evidence of a flight toward gold.
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