Summary: The increase in the yen’s share of reserves was flattered by the yen’s 9% appreciation. The dollar and euro’s share of reserves were stable. Chinese integration has seen the share of unallocated reserves fall. Starting with Q3 data, (available end of March 2017) will break out the yuan’s share of reserves. The IMF provides the most authoritative data on central bank reserves. The composition is published at the end of the quarter for the preceding quarter. At the end of last week, its COFER report was published with data through the end of June 2016. This Great Graphic from the IMF provides 2.5 years of the composition of allocated reserves. Beginning at the highest level, we note that the dollar value of global reserves increased by bln in Q2 to .993 trillion. This is an important qualification. The IMF reports its reserve figures in terms of dollar value. There is only one currency not impacted by the changes in valuation, and that, of course, is the US dollar itself. Dollar holdings (among reserves where the allocation has been declared) increased by almost .5 bln to .759 trillion. The dollar’s share of reserves was little changed at 63.4% from Q1’s 63.5% share.
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Marc Chandler considers the following as important: COFER, EUR, Featured, FX Trends, GBP, Great Graphic, JPY, newsletter, SDR, USD, Yuan
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Summary:
The increase in the yen’s share of reserves was flattered by the yen’s 9% appreciation.
The dollar and euro’s share of reserves were stable.
Chinese integration has seen the share of unallocated reserves fall. Starting with Q3 data, (available end of March 2017) will break out the yuan’s share of reserves.
The IMF provides the most authoritative data on central bank reserves. The composition is published at the end of the quarter for the preceding quarter. At the end of last week, its COFER report was published with data through the end of June 2016. This Great Graphic from the IMF provides 2.5 years of the composition of allocated reserves.
Beginning at the highest level, we note that the dollar value of global reserves increased by $55 bln in Q2 to $10.993 trillion. This is an important qualification. The IMF reports its reserve figures in terms of dollar value. There is only one currency not impacted by the changes in valuation, and that, of course, is the US dollar itself. Dollar holdings (among reserves where the allocation has been declared) increased by almost $19.5 bln to $4.759 trillion. The dollar’s share of reserves was little changed at 63.4% from Q1’s 63.5% share. |
World Official Foreign Exchange Reserves by Currency |