Quote from damir00:
oil is not big enough to impact reserve currency status, nor is oil traded in any meaningful way between the US and countries who hold large quantities of US currency.
Quote from izeickl:
Oil is one of if not the biggest item that every country needs, and its not the direct trade of oil between the US and other countries, but the fact that oil can only be bought with US dollars...thus, any country needing oil (i.e. every country in the world) needs a huge supply of USD to purchase it with. If oil was sold in say Euros aswell as or instead of USD then suddenly the USD is not needed in such large supply. Whether that happens or not is to be seen (rumours are OPEC is at least considering it), Russia aswell is pondering it (Iraq actually DID sell in Euros till Junior went in on his horse)
Will Russia's hopes to sell oil in euros ever fly?
http://www.forbes.com/home_europe/newswire/2003/11/24/rtr1159161.html
When will we buy oil in euros?
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,6903,900867,00.html
European Union presses Russia to price some oil exports in euros
http://www.eubusiness.com/eunews/EUNews.2003-10-30.0502
Iraq, the Dollar and the Euro
http://www.theglobalist.com/DBWeb/StoryId.aspx?StoryId=3193

Quote from TheStudent:
... the US is the world's biggest consumer of oil exports,
oil will be priced in US dollars.
You don't try and sell your products to your biggest customer in a foreign currency now would you?![]()
Quote from izeickl:
any country needing oil (i.e. every country in the world) needs a huge supply of USD to purchase it with.
Quote from damir00:
this is simply not true. you can buy oil using *any* freely convertible, widely available currency. you guys are talking about 19th century levels of sophistication...
Quote from izeickl:
why would pricing in other currencies be even mentioned or thought of as an issue to be considered?
triply true if the "talking" is happening on a chat board.
