Gonzalo Lira Profile picture
Mar 30 11 tweets 2 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
Why are so many countries all of a sudden turning to the yuan to buy their essential commodities?

Why is the world de-dollarizing so quickly?

Simple — the Russian sanctions.

1/11
Russia is the biggest single commodity producer in the world — they have oil AND gas AND agro AND minerals AND anything else.

But because of the sanctions, Russia CANNOT take dollars (or euros) for sales of their commodities.

2/
First, the sanctions disconnected Russia from SWIFT, meaning Russians can’t pay for things they would want to buy with dollars.

So why would Russia take dollars for their commodities — if they can’t buy stuff with those dollars.

3/
Plus their dollar assets get confiscated in the West. So why hold dollars, and dollar assets to park them in, if they will be stolen?

So because of sanctions, Russia has been FORCED to de-dollarize.

Russia didn’t want to de-dollarize — they were obliged.

By the West.

4/
But Russia still has to trade, because it still has to acquire things it cannot produce at home, and still has a surplus of commodities with which to acquire these foreign goods.

Apart from the West, Russia’s major trading partners are China and India.

5/
So it makes sense for Russia to sell its commodities in yuan and rupees: Sell oil/agro/gas in yuan, and buy Chinese goods with those yuan. Same with India.

But why are OTHER countries signing treaties to trade in yuan, like France and Brazil in the last few days?

6/
They’re getting ahead of the curve.

As more commodities trading takes place in yuan and rupees, the more demand for those currencies. Hence it becomes smart to cut a deal with China NOW — to fix an exchange rate of yuan.

In essence, these deals are longs on the yuan.

7/
The effect is, these trade deals eventually lead to more de-dollarization—which becomes a self-reinforcing cycle, as dollars become less valuable (because they can buy less commodities) so more countries want yuan, leading to more de-dollarization, leading to a weaker dollar.

8/
All this leads to the collapse of the dollar into hyperinflation.

The dollar was valuable BECAUSE it was the currency in international commodities trade, which created the demand for dollars and dollar assets outside the US — thereby financing the enormous American debts.

9/
With trade de-dollarization, there’s no longer as much demand for dollars overseas, leading to American domestic inflation and an inability to continue piling on debt.

Ultimately, the Federal Reserve will be forced to simply print — which will lead to dollar hyperinflation.

10/
BTW, Russia didn’t cause this. The sanctions which triggered this worldwide de-dollarization was just the final straw.

It didn’t help that American leadership seems capricious and hysterical, making other countries very nervous that they might be sanctioned too.

11/11

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More from @GonzaloLira1968

Mar 24
About James Vasquez:

He was not just a fraud—though he did take $3 million from donations, monies whose whereabouts are unknown.

But as I showed in my video last April, Vasquez was clearly a part of a Kiev/Washington propaganda effort.

1/9

via @YouTube
As I showed in the video, Vasquez stood with destroyed “Russian tanks”—actually UA tanks—pretending to have destroyed them with UA soldiers.

In the same location, other propaganda videos were recorded—as I also proved.

So Vasquez obviously had support from the Kiev regime.

2/
When he returned to the United States, James Vasquez showed up in Washington—and made the rounds on Capitol Hill. There are pictures of him palling around with @AdamKinzinger and other congressmen and senators.

So Vasquez obviously had support from the Washington warmongers.

3/
Read 10 tweets
Mar 21
What is this US Govt. and Media obsession with insisting that Russia’s a “junior partner” to China? That Russia could not survive without China?

I think it’s a coordinate effort to paint China as the “final boss” for the upcoming Sino-American War.

1/10
ft.com/content/73d50d…
First off, the Financial Times’ @ftworldnews portrayal of Russia being industrially empty, relying solely on China for everything that is not a commodity, is absurd—demonstrably untrue.

Russia has a huge industrial base—unlike the West, whose industry is hollowed out.

2/
Second, it’s no secret that Russia has one-tenth the population of China, and has a smaller economy as a result.

But the US has a quarter of the population of China, and a smaller economy as well. Does THAT mean that the US is a “junior partner” to China?

3/
Read 10 tweets
Mar 12
Re. #SVB:

Why aren't Bitcoin and crypto-currencies safe from an IRL bank-run, financial crisis, and stock/bond market crash?

Simple: The majority of crypto holders and a significant number of major holders view them as a short- to medium-term speculative yield opportunity.

1/6
Because of low yields over the past 15 years, investors have been chasing riskier asset classes, in the pursuit of yields.

Before cryptos, they were into junk and emerging markets.

These parvenue crypto holders do not seriously think they are an alternative currency.

2/
Parvenues see cryptos as a moving train: Hop on—then hop off at the first sign of trouble. Why do you think they're so volatile.

A real honest-to-God IRL liquidity crisis—bank run, stock/bond crash—will *automatically* trigger a sell-off of cryptos.

3/
Read 6 tweets
Mar 8
Within 12 hours, both @nytimes & @washingtonpost published long articles claiming that a Ukrainian group blew up the Nord Stream pipeline.

German media picked it up.

Now the German defense minister is threatening to withdraw support for Kiev.

We now know what’s the plan.

1/6
The Germans are going to use the terrorist attack against their infrastructure as the excuse to pull out of the Ukraine project.

Olaf Scholtz went to the US to tell Biden: Either YOU blame Ukraine so we can pull our support for Ukraine—or WE blame YOU and pull out of NATO.

2/
Scholtz’s trip was last week—and now coordinated stories come out. Hmm!

It is inconceivable that the Times, the Post, FT and Zeit would have simultaneously published essentially the same long article giving such a laughably fantastical story.

3/
Read 6 tweets
Mar 1
This is the full piece that aired on RT, about John McIntyre, an American foreign fighter who spent a year in combat for the Zelensky regime, before defecting to Russia. It’s 17 minutes long, but worth the time.

Some observations.

1/5

His video evidence is compelling. He clearly was fighting in country.

He alleges torture/murder of Russian POW’s.

He alleges widespread corruption, significant amounts of Western provided weapons being stolen by AFU and sold on the black market.

2/
He also alleges that the US military is far more embedded in the AFU, claiming Americans gave coordinates and combat orders at the unit level of the Kiev regime forces.

3/
Read 6 tweets
Feb 20
Re. ChatGPT and AI generally: Has anyone wondered about its effects on a “post-industrial” service-oriented society?

I think it’ll lead to Eloi and Morlocks in Western society: A tiny minority of well-off hedonists—and a vast underclass of wage-slaves barely surviving.

1/16
The idea of Globalization was to offshore heavy industry to low-wage countries—so that high-wage countries could improve GDP by concentrating on more high value-added industries.

This destroyed factories in the West—and the skilled and semi-skilled jobs at those factories.

2/
What were those blue-collar workers told do? “Learn to code!”

Education in the West was supposed to turn those blue-collar workers into white-collar workers.

It didn’t happen. The lower end of the middle-class became working poor, relying on government handouts.

3/
Read 17 tweets

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