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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Julius Wong who wrote (213679)4/19/2025 8:33:16 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217564
 
the bother is nearly done-done, as in put-a-fork-in-it, according to suspect Bloomberg, no doubt out to denigrate the Trump, but let's see

but, just to be diversified, GetMoreAnythingElseOtherThanDollars

bloomberg.com

The Dollar’s Monopoly in Payments Will Soon Be History
The shift may start with transactions where it just greases the wheels of commerce.

18 April 2025 at 02:00 GMT+8

By Andy Mukherjee
Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies and financial services in Asia. Previously, he worked for Reuters, the Straits Times and Bloomberg News.


Tourists in Hoi An shouldn’t need the dollar to access the Vietnamese dong.

Photographer: James MacDonald/Bloomberg

The social-media video where Donald Trump’s AI avatar is making Nike sneakers may be just a spoof on the US president’s quixotic bid to reindustrialize America by eliminating bilateral trade deficits. But the meme contains a kernel of truth. The world’s farmers, fishermen, and factory workers labor hard to earn the $100 bill that the Federal Reserve prints at no cost. This exalted status, which a French politician from the 1960s termed as the dollar’s “exorbitant privilege,” has been taken to a breaking point by the tariff war.

No matter what happens in the long run to the US currency’s value or its role as a safe haven for central banks and private investors, one thing is clear: The greenback’s monopoly in payments, whereby it’s exchanged in 88% of all trades, is headed for the history books. A weekend trip to Vietnam brought that home to me.

In Hoi An, a 15th-century trading port repurposed as a tourist attraction, tailors and shoemakers pay for visitors’ taxi rides to their shops and shell out commissions to hotels for directing guests their way. If they didn’t have to charge customers a 3% credit-card fee, they might be able to do more to nudge inveterate shoppers. For instance, they could raise their prices by 1% and still throw in a dinner voucher for high spenders — if they purchase one more linen shirt. The buyers will be richer, as will the sellers.

The reason they can’t fund such sales promotions is the dollar. Or, to be more precise, a financial architecture built around the idea that a payment made on a foreign credit or debit card must set off a chain of expensive activity underpinned by the greenback. For 18 major global currencies that settle without much friction, those costs are negligible. But for the Vietnamese dong, and most other Asian currencies, they’re a burden, which a highly competitive apparel and footwear industry working on tight margins can’t absorb. So it passes on all of it — and sometimes more — to a buyer who would much rather take the free meal.

Take my example. To pay the tailor in Hoi An, my bank had to obtain the local currency, which doesn’t have a liquid market outside Vietnam. So my money most probably got converted into dollars in Hong Kong. After reaching Vietnam, the funds got exchanged again into Vietnamese dong. Almost 40% of the greenback’s $7.5 trillion daily turnover comes from its role as a vehicle of value. Neither the buyer nor the seller has any direct interest in it. Yet they can’t transact without it.

Trump is aware of America’s special status: He has even threatenedcountries looking to come up with alternative global reserve currencies with 100% tariffs. A high-profile disengagement with the dollar — for instance, when it comes to Saudi Arabia’s invoicing of its oil — may not go down well with Washington. What the White House can’t control, however, are low-profile shifts in the engine room of the payment industry. Even before Trump’s inauguration, I notedthat the world of money was splintering into Western and Eastern blocs. The trade war may have accelerated the schism, though the separation is now more likely to be along a US/non-US axis than a West/East split.

I can already pay a Thai merchant in baht from my Hong Kong bank account by scanning a QR code. Vietnam plans to establish similar connectivity with Singapore. These links are between commercial institutions, with third parties providing foreign-exchange services. However, some central banks in Europe are working with their counterparts in Asia to explore automated conversion using blockchain technology. If the pilots succeed, there may be no room for middlemen — software embedded in digital representations of fiat currencies will act as moneychangers. Ergo, there may be no need for the dollar to act as a go-between in transactions that don’t involve Americans.

This is just one of the many experiments underway to boost the efficiency of cross-border retail payments. They’re underpinned by $800 billion in remittances by overseas workers. And then there’s what tourists spend. In Asia, they’re staying 7.4 days on average, 1.3 days more than before the pandemic, according to Mastercard Inc.’s latest data. For a small business in a lesser-known beach town competing against larger firms in more popular holiday destinations, each hour is valuable — and an expensive payment system an irritant. It has been tolerated so far because nothing cheaper was available, and Asian policymakers’ focus was on shipping goods to the US, a much larger opportunity.

But everything has changed since the April 2 reciprocal tariffs. Chinese President Xi Jinping was about to arrive in Vietnam just as I was leaving. Beijing has been pushing the so-called mBridge initiative in which financial institutions can swap digital currencies issued by their central banks to settle cross-border claims. If the Trump administration is going to upset friends and foes alike to pursue a chimerical vision of labor-intensive industrialization, then it has to be prepared for geopolitical realignments, and an erosion of at least one form of America’s exorbitant privilege.

Those who still view the dollar as a relatively safe asset may want to hold it, as long as the US remains the world’s predominant superpower. But for tourists buying shoes or shirts in Vietnam, the 3% extra charge on payments is an avoidable, anticlimactic loss after haggling for — and winning — a nice discount on the merchandise.

Rather than incurring outsize fees to Visa Inc. and its partner banks, a dinner at Hoi An’s Morning Glory restaurant seems like a fairer use of my money — while I wait for the last buttons to be sewed on.



To: Julius Wong who wrote (213679)4/19/2025 11:34:05 AM
From: marcher1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Julius Wong

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217564
 
--manufacturing jobs--

the jobs just need to be engineered to fit the worker's ability/skill...
e.g., via remote control to match computer games like:
grand theft auto
minecraft
fortnite
et. cetera...

system/orientation/bias change from
people-fitting-jobs
to
jobs-fitting-people.

easy-peasy?

dunno.
but, otherwise, robots/AI to make gen z irrelevant.
and gen z is aware of this,
thus lack motivation,
per
motivation for what?



To: Julius Wong who wrote (213679)4/19/2025 11:32:07 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217564
 
<<manufacturing>> capacities, if freed up, can be reallocated, am told, as inventory-build imperative can be addressed, surmising ... below la bombe seems safer than nukes, and resulted from ship-building value-added supply-chain, a topic of current interest

scmp.com

China tests non-nuclear hydrogen bomb, science paper shows
Published: 10:00am, 20 Apr 2025



Chinese researchers have successfully detonated a hydrogen-based explosive device in a controlled field test, triggering devastating chemical chain reactions without using any nuclear materials, according to a study published last month.

The 2kg (4.4lbs) bomb generated a fireball exceeding 1,000 degrees Celsius (1,832 degrees Fahrenheit) for more than two seconds – 15 times longer than equivalent TNT blasts – without using any nuclear materials, it said.

Developed by the China State Shipbuilding Corporation’s (CSSC) 705 Research Institute, a key player in underwater weapon systems, the device uses a magnesium-based solid-state hydrogen storage material.



To: Julius Wong who wrote (213679)4/19/2025 11:35:10 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217564
 
very interesting
edition.cnn.com
New evidence challenges theories on the origin of water on Earth, study suggests

Sign up for CNN’s Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more.

CNN —
Researchers say they have uncovered evidence that early Earth was home to more hydrogen than previously thought, calling into question widely held beliefs about the origins of water and the evolution of our planet.

Scientists from the University of Oxford analyzed a rare type of meteorite known as an enstatite chondrite. The space rock dates to around 4.6 billion years ago and is believed to be similar in composition to early Earth, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Icarus.

Related article Scientists detect signature of life on a distant planet, study suggests


The researchers found that the majority of the hydrogen contained within the meteorite was intrinsic, rather than being present due to contamination, suggesting that early Earth would have been home to sufficient hydrogen to have allowed the formation of water molecules.

This finding calls into question the widely held belief that hydrogen arrived on Earth in asteroids that bombarded what was previously a dry, rocky planet incapable of supporting life.

“We assumed that Earth has water today because of quite a lucky scenario where it had been hit by these asteroids,” lead study author Tom Barrett, a doctoral student in the department of Earth sciences at the University of Oxford, told CNN on Wednesday.

“But what we’ve demonstrated in this study is that actually the material which formed Earth in the first instance actually did contain a lot of hydrogen and oxygen,” he added. “The discovery of hydrogen in this meteorite means that Earth potentially could have been hydrated or wet from its initial formation.”

As for why the levels of hydrogen identified in the study previously hadn’t been detected, Barrett explained the chemical element is hard to measure, particularly at such low concentrations. The detection was only possible thanks to a technique known as X-ray Absorption Near Edge Structure, or XANES, spectroscopy, he said.



“To do that you need a particle accelerator,” he said. “This is like an enormous, really expensive facility, which we’ve been very fortunate to have used to this study. But it’s not exactly the kind of experiment that you can do in the garage.”

The study potentially upends our understanding of early Earth, but the discovery of hydrogen in the meteorite doesn’t mean that life would have necessarily evolved sooner, Barrett said. This is because the habitability of a planet may depend more on the way it evolves than the material it is formed from, he said.

Hydrogen on early EarthA team of scientists at the French National Centre for Scientific Research had previously analyzed the meteorite, known as LAR 12252, which had been collected in Antarctica. The August 2020 study found that the space rock’s chondrules, or minuscule spherical objects, and organic material contained within it had traces of hydrogen. The research, however, only accounted for a portion of the hydrogen within the meteorite.

The researchers behind the new study believed more hydrogen could be attached to sulphur within the meteorite. The team unexpectedly detected hydrogen sulphide within the fine matrix immediately surrounding the chondrules — “on average almost 10 times more” hydrogen sulphide than found in the spherical objects, according to the study.

“We were incredibly excited when the analysis told us the sample contained hydrogen sulphide — just not where we expected!” Barrett said in a statement. “Because the likelihood of this hydrogen sulphide originating from terrestrial contamination is very low, this research provides vital evidence to support the theory that water on Earth is native — that it is a natural outcome of what our planet is made of.”

The role of asteroid and comet impactsNext, Barrett plans to analyze more meteorites in an effort to ascertain exactly how much hydrogen would have been present on Earth, and how much may have been delivered from external sources.

Working out how Earth came to look the way it does today is a fundamental question for planetary scientists, said study coauthor James Bryson, an associate professor in the department of Earth sciences at the University of Oxford.

“We now think that the material that built our planet — which we can study using these rare meteorites — was far richer in hydrogen than we thought previously,” he said.

“This finding supports the idea that the formation of water on Earth was a natural process, rather than a fluke of hydrated asteroids bombarding our planet after it formed.”

Matt Genge, a planetary scientist at Imperial College London, who was not involved in the study, told CNN that while the study is an “interesting result,” the evidence is not sufficient to overturn the longstanding theory of the origins of water.

Related article Scientists redid an experiment that showed how life on Earth could have started. They found a new possibility


The meteorite in question had been in Antarctica likely for hundreds of thousands of years, he said, and it is impossible to completely rule out the chance that the hydrogen may have formed during that time.

“Just the fact that there is a possibility makes the argument less strong,” Genge said.

Bryson acknowledged that the meteorite was indeed likely on Earth for many years before it was collected but stands by the study results.

“We believe we have taken every effort we can in our analysis workflow to mitigate the impact of terrestrial water on our results, and we do think that some of the total amount of H (hydrogen) in the meteorite is due to Earth’s water (maybe about 15%),” Bryson said via email in response to Genge’s statement.

“We also think that some H (hydrogen) was still delivered from asteroids and comets, however we now think this is a small proportion of the total H (hydrogen) found throughout our planet. So Matt’s assessment of this meteorite is justified, but we strived to minimise his concern.”



To: Julius Wong who wrote (213679)4/20/2025 12:18:25 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217564
 
<<manufacturing>> stuff on atoll for sustainable living