Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Exclusive-European officials consider pooling dollars to lessen Fed reliance after Trump shocks

By Elisa Martinuzzi, Balazs Koranyi, Stefania Spezzati, Mathieu Rosemain and Giuseppe Fonte

(Reuters) -European financial stability officials are debating whether to create an alternative to Federal Reserve funding backstops by pooling dollars held by non-U.S. central banks in a bid to reduce their reliance on the U.S. under the Trump administration, five officials familiar with the matter said.

The talks,​ reported here for the first time, are a reaction to policies under U.S. President Donald Trump that have upended long-standing ties, put the Fed’s independence in doubt and underlined the dominant ‌role the U.S. plays in global finance.

The Fed’s facilities lend dollars to other central banks and function as a lifeline during bouts of market stress, ensuring global financial stability is maintained.

Interviews with more than a dozen European central banking and supervisory officials show that they worry the facilities could ‌be weaponized by the Trump administration.

Two of the people said concerns peaked around April, when Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs on imports sent shockwaves through the global financial system and exposed weakness in banks’ funding plans.

Worries have since ebbed, in part due to Fed assurances, the people said. Chair Jerome Powell told a European Central Bank-hosted conference in July that the U.S. central bank has no plans to change how it offers dollar liquidity to other official entities.

Kush Desai, a White House spokesman, said Trump had “repeatedly affirmed his commitment to maintaining the strength and power” of the dollar.

ECB and Fed spokespeople declined to comment.

DOLLAR POOLING HAS LIMITATIONS

Some of the sources said that pooling dollar reserves would face practical difficulties and may not ⁠be viable.

Nevertheless, talks are ongoing at staff rather than top ECB policymaker level ‌and involve central banks in the euro zone and outside the bloc, said four of the officials, who have direct knowledge of the matter.

One said some national central banks in the region are pushing for it.

Reuters could not establish whether central banks outside Europe were also involved in talks.

Other countries have already tried pooling resources.

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) ‍along with China, Hong Kong, Japan and Korea combined resources to assist member countries under the Chiang Mai Initiative.

Asked in July about concerns stemming from possible fragmentation in finance, Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda pointed to the initiative, which began operating in 2014 and has since grown to $240 billion.

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