Neither the yuan nor the euro is on a path to replace the dollar as the world’s trade settlement and reserve currency, while the petroyuan will remain an unrealized dream of the Chinese Communist Party.
The UAE’s exit from OPEC on May 1, 2026 immediately triggered a familiar wave of commentary warning that the petrodollar system is under threat and that China’s yuan stands ready to displace the dollar in global oil markets. That narrative is not supported by the data, and it was not supported by the data the last time it circulated, or the time before that.
The petrodollar system, under which Gulf oil is priced and settled in U.S. dollars, with surplus revenues recycled into U.S. assets, has underwritten dollar dominance since the 1970s.
A data point that doomsayers focus on is that the dollar’s share of global foreign exchange reserves has fallen from a peak of roughly 72% in 2001 to approximately 57% today, which they cite as evidence of the dollar’s decline. However, the drop correlates directly with the expansion of the European Union and eurozone countries trading with each other in euros. And the euro’s gains in Europe do not represent broader internationalization as a reserve or trade currency.
The euro launched in 1999 with the original 11 eurozone members. Its reserve share climbed through the early 2000s as the EU expanded, peaking around 27–28 percent of global reserves circa 2009, then declined and stabilized at about 20 percent, a share it has held for the last decade. Those gains are concentrated in Europe and its immediate neighborhood, including EU members, accession candidates, and a small number of non-EU states, such as Andorra, Kosovo, Montenegro, and North Macedonia (pegged), that use the euro by convention.
South American and Asian countries have not adopted the euro at all, except as a reserve currency in quantities consistent with global averages. Most importantly, the decline in the dollar’s share of reserves has not benefited the yuan. It has benefited the euro, and only within the eurozone.
The yuan’s share of global reserves is approximately 2.5 percent, barely changing over the past decade despite China being the world’s second-largest economy. ASEAN economies have not shifted to the yuan. India, a BRICS trading partner, does not hold significant amounts of yuan. Japan and South Korea are not holding the yuan as a primary reserve currency.
The yuan’s share of global payments through SWIFT sits at roughly 2.5–3 percent, and a disproportionate share of that is China-Russia bilateral trade, a captive arrangement driven by sanctions, not yuan attractiveness. Russia itself has been attempting to exit yuan accumulation because the currency is not freely convertible, and Chinese banks have been restricting transactions under pressure from secondary sanctions.
Another often-cited data point in the dollar-decline narrative is that China and Saudi Arabia were allegedly in discussions about pricing and trading oil in yuan. The claim rests on a single media report from March 2022 stating that Saudi Arabia and China were in active talks to price some oil sales in yuan and that Saudi Aramco was considering yuan-denominated futures contracts.
The Saudis may have first raised the possibility as early as 2019, according to Reuters, though those discussions led to no action and fell away during the COVID years. That report, based on exploratory and unconfirmed discussions, has since been recycled through Chinese state media and the Western financial press as though it represents a sustained trend toward de-dollarization.
No deal followed. No invoicing changed. During Xi Jinping’s December 2022 visit to Riyadh, where he attended the first China-Arab States Summit and the China-Gulf Cooperation Council Summit, he called on Gulf states to switch to the yuan for bilateral trade, including oil. Gulf producers showed no interest.
The UAE’s trade minister said his country was open to discussing settlement in different currencies, but only for non-oil trade. Energy Intelligence reported no imminent plan for any major move by Gulf producers away from the dollar. Among OPEC producers, the appetite for pricing oil in yuan is, according to analysts who cover the market directly, almost nil.
The structural reasons are straightforward. Gulf currencies are pegged to the dollar, the Saudi riyal at 3.75 since 1986, the UAE dirham at 3.6725 since 1997, and the Qatari riyal at 3.64 since 1980, with the Iraqi dinar managed against the dollar by its central bank. If the dollar appreciates against the yuan, selling oil in yuan cuts Gulf producers’ incomes in domestic-currency terms. Accepting yuan means accumulating a non-convertible currency that cannot be used to defend the peg.
The GCC’s sovereign wealth funds hold more than $2 trillion invested in U.S. assets and require approximately $800 billion in dollar reserves to sustain those pegs. Saudi Arabia alone maintains roughly $435 billion in USD reserves, with oil exports settled in dollars by default.
Beijing has not laid out a roadmap for liberalizing its currency and capital account, leaving the operational risks of any petroyuan arrangement unresolved. When Iran and Venezuela previously pushed within OPEC to price oil in currencies other than the dollar, Saudi Arabia blocked it.
The security dimension is the factor China cannot address. China has explicitly stated that it has no interest in assuming a prominent role in the Gulf’s military or security architecture. The U.S. maintains formal military bases in Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar, and access arrangements in the UAE, Oman, and Saudi Arabia, with approximately 40,000–50,000 troops across at least 19 locations in the region as of early 2026.
The Gulf OPEC members, the ones that move markets, are all U.S.-hosted. China’s pitch to Gulf states amounted to trade in our currency. The implicit follow-up, who protects your oil fields, shipping lanes, and territorial integrity, had no answer from Beijing.
The petroyuan is also seen in the region as a door that, once opened, cannot be closed selectively. If Saudi Arabia accepts yuan for Chinese purchases, it cannot refuse the petrorupee, the petroyen, or the petrowon. Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan together account for nearly a third of Saudi petroleum exports, more than China’s share alone.
Accepting yuan invoicing for one buyer creates pressure to fragment invoicing across all major buyers, an administrative and financial risk no Gulf state is willing to absorb.
The UAE’s recent exit from OPEC only strengthens the U.S. position. A UAE outside OPEC but holding a dollar peg, receiving U.S. dollar swap lines, which Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent publicly backed before the U.S. Senate just days before the exit, hosting U.S. military assets, and selling oil in dollars is a pro-dollar actor with greater production freedom.
Paul Blustein of the Center for Strategic and International Studies has argued that Gulf states chose the dollar not because of any formal arrangement but because of TINA, there is no alternative, with the depth and liquidity of U.S. financial markets leaving petrostates little practical choice.
S&P Global forecasts that the petroyuan will take decades to scale, even under favorable conditions. The de-dollarization narrative recycles the same unverified 2022 discussions, the same marginal SWIFT statistics inflated by sanctions-driven trade with Russia, and the same theoretical future that has failed to materialize for the better part of a decade.
The post The Petrodollar Is Not Under Threat: Debunking the Yuan Narrative appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.