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🚨 The system that kept the US dollar on top for 50 years is starting to crack.
It was built on oil.
Now oil alone is not enough to hold it together.
Here is what is changing 👇
After 1971, the US needed a new way to keep global demand for the dollar.
In 1974, it made a deal with Saudi Arabia.
Oil would be priced in dollars.
The US would provide protection.
That created a simple loop:
Countries needed dollars to buy oil.
Oil exporters sent those dollars back into US assets.
That is the petrodollar system.
For decades, it worked smoothly.
Now that structure is being tested from multiple sides.
First, security.
The system depends on stability in the Middle East.
But instability is rising, especially around key routes like the Strait of Hormuz.
Second, trust.
In 2022, the US froze around $300B of Russian reserves.
That sent a clear message.
Dollar reserves are not fully neutral.
Third, necessity.
Some oil trades are now moving outside the dollar, including in yuan.
At the same time, China has become a major buyer of Gulf oil.
Even small shifts matter.
Because the system only works if oil stays priced in dollars.
There is also a quieter shift happening.
Oil exporters are no longer recycling all their dollars into US Treasuries.
More capital is staying local or moving into regional investments.
That weakens the system further.
So the picture is changing:
Security is less reliable.
Trust is weaker.
Dollar dependence is slowly declining.
This does not mean the dollar collapses tomorrow.
But it does mean the system is no longer as strong as it was.
The shift has already started.