Competitors to the Greenback Are Less Significant

Hypothetical Scenario

Let’s develop a scenario to explain the importance of foreign exchange (FX) markets and specifically, the dominance of the U.S. dollar. Say, for example, Thailand, one of the world’s major rice exporters, engages in trade with Brazil, the second‑largest cotton exporter. When these two countries conduct bilateral trade, they typically do not settle transactions directly in Thai baht or Brazilian real. Instead, they frequently convert their home currencies into U.S. dollars, the dominant invoicing and settlement currency in global trade and FX markets. Because the U.S. dollar is one of the most liquid and widely accepted intermediaries for cross‑border payments, it is the de facto choice for this hypothetical Thai-Brazilian trade settlement.

Dominance of the Dollar

The previous scenario explains why the dollar has maintained such dominance in global trade. One of the most convincing stats for the dollar’s reserve currency status is the fact that the U.S. dollar is in roughly 90% of all global FX transactions. And that hasn’t materially changed for over two decades. But in contrast, in recent years, the euro was in roughly 30% of FX transactions, down from roughly 40% in 2010[1].

Network effects help explain why the U.S. dollar maintains its dominant role as the world’s primary reserve currency. Because so many countries, financial institutions, and global markets already use the dollar for trade, investment, and reserve holdings, its value and convenience increase as more participants rely on it. This broad adoption creates a self‑reinforcing cycle: central banks continue to hold dollars because many global transactions are dollar‑denominated, and global transactions remain dollar‑denominated because central banks continue to hold dollars. Because so many are already using the dominant product, switching becomes difficult, and competitors struggle to gain traction.

In addition to the vast majority of all FX transactions, the dollar makes up a sizable share of foreign exchange reserves. The International Monetary Fund’s Currency Composition of Official Foreign Exchange Reserves (COFER) data underscore this dynamic, showing that the U.S. dollar represents the largest share of global foreign exchange reserves. For example, it accounted for roughly 57% of world reserves in the latter half of 2025.

U.S. Dollar Has the Largest Share of Global Foreign Exchange Reserves