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Iran bans using dollars in import documents

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Iran bans using dollars in import documents
Wed Feb 28, 2018 07:34PM
0f9290bf-71bf-45bb-8c43-ff890263a1e7.jpg

Iran moved a step closer to a plan to ditch the dollar in its trade activities by announcing that purchase orders by merchants that are based on the greenback would no longer be allowed to go through import proceedings.


Iran moved a step closer to a plan to ditch the dollar in its trade activities by announcing that purchase orders by merchants that are based on the greenback would no longer be allowed to go through import proceedings.

Iran’s domestic media reported that the policy was in line with an official request by the Central Bank of Iran (CBI) and was specifically meant to address fluctuations in market rates of the dollar.

IRNA news agency quoted Mehdi Kasraeipour, CBI’s director of Foreign Exchange Rules and Policies Affairs, as saying that the move had become effective from Wednesday by virtue of a letter sent to the Ministry of Industry, Mines and Trade.

Kasraeipour emphasized that this was not expected to create any major trouble for traders, stressing that this was because the share of the dollar in Iran’s trade activities was not high.

“It’s been for a long time that Iran’s banking sector cannot use the dollar as a result of the sanctions,” he said.

US banks are still banned from dealing with Iran as part of an old US trade embargo that still remains in place. Accordingly, this is believed to have already effectively blocked any transactions with Iran which is based on US dollars because they would ultimately have to be cleared in the US.

“Considering that the use of the dollar is banned for Iran and traders are literally using alternative currencies in their transactions, there is no longer any reason to proceed with invoices that use the dollar as the base rate?” Kasraeipour said.

The official further emphasized that Iranian merchants would need to inform their suppliers to change the base currency from the dollar to other currencies so that the related import documentations can be proceeded at Iran’s entry points.

He said the merchants also needed to specify whether they would proceed with their payments through banks or currency exchange shops.

Kasraeipour said when an invoice is issued in dollars, a demand naturally develops in the network of exchange shops for dollars. He further suggested that this could eventually lead to a rise in the rates of the hard currency.

Meanwhile, criticisms are emerging in Iran’s media over the costs that this policy could create for merchants and eventually the consumers.

ISNA, for example, quoted unnamed merchants as saying that they and the foreign suppliers would have to consider an extra expense for converting the base currency from the dollar to other currencies. This, it said, would increase the costs for imports and eventually push up the prices of commodities imported.

http://www.presstv.com/Detail/2018/02/28/553939/Iran-bans-using-dollars-in-import-documents
 
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Iran bans using dollars in import documents
Wed Feb 28, 2018 07:34PM
0f9290bf-71bf-45bb-8c43-ff890263a1e7.jpg

Iran moved a step closer to a plan to ditch the dollar in its trade activities by announcing that purchase orders by merchants that are based on the greenback would no longer be allowed to go through import proceedings.


Iran moved a step closer to a plan to ditch the dollar in its trade activities by announcing that purchase orders by merchants that are based on the greenback would no longer be allowed to go through import proceedings.

Iran’s domestic media reported that the policy was in line with an official request by the Central Bank of Iran (CBI) and was specifically meant to address fluctuations in market rates of the dollar.

IRNA news agency quoted Mehdi Kasraeipour, CBI’s director of Foreign Exchange Rules and Policies Affairs, as saying that the move had become effective from Wednesday by virtue of a letter sent to the Ministry of Industry, Mines and Trade.

Kasraeipour emphasized that this was not expected to create any major trouble for traders, stressing that this was because the share of the dollar in Iran’s trade activities was not high.

“It’s been for a long time that Iran’s banking sector cannot use the dollar as a result of the sanctions,” he said.

US banks are still banned from dealing with Iran as part of an old US trade embargo that still remains in place. Accordingly, this is believed to have already effectively blocked any transactions with Iran which is based on US dollars because they would ultimately have to be cleared in the US.

“Considering that the use of the dollar is banned for Iran and traders are literally using alternative currencies in their transactions, there is no longer any reason to proceed with invoices that use the dollar as the base rate?” Kasraeipour said.

The official further emphasized that Iranian merchants would need to inform their suppliers to change the base currency from the dollar to other currencies so that the related import documentations can be proceeded at Iran’s entry points.

He said the merchants also needed to specify whether they would proceed with their payments through banks or currency exchange shops.

Kasraeipour said when an invoice is issued in dollars, a demand naturally develops in the network of exchange shops for dollars. He further suggested that this could eventually lead to a rise in the rates of the hard currency.

Meanwhile, criticisms are emerging in Iran’s media over the costs that this policy could create for merchants and eventually the consumers.

ISNA, for example, quoted unnamed merchants as saying that they and the foreign suppliers would have to consider an extra expense for converting the base currency from the dollar to other currencies. This, it said, would increase the costs for imports and eventually push up the prices of commodities imported.

http://www.presstv.com/Detail/2018/02/28/553939/Iran-bans-using-dollars-in-import-documents
Good to see.:yay:
 
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Iran accepts Euro's, Yen, Rouble and Yuan as trade currencies today. All Iranian oil & gas along with other imports exports are denominated in those aforementioned currencies.

There was nothing stopping Iran from using those currencies 20 years ago. Iran can accept the currency of Zimbabwe too. Nobody is telling Iran not to.
The only currency restriction was the one Iran set itself.
 
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20 years ago when u were in your diapers, the world was very different. Nobody was willing to purchase Iranian oil let alone pay for it in Euro's. Putin was practically a nobody and Russia was stuck nearly bankrupt in the drunk Yeltsin era , and China was an emerging third world country.

It took a while, but the de-dollarization on going now is a reality.

There was nothing stopping Iran from using those currencies 20 years ago. Iran can accept the currency of Zimbabwe too. Nobody is telling Iran not to.
The only currency restriction was the one Iran set itself.
 
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20 years ago when u were in your diapers, the world was very different. Nobody was willing to purchase Iranian oil let alone pay for it in Euro's. Putin was practically a nobody and Russia was stuck nearly bankrupt in the drunk Yeltsin era , and China was an emerging third world country.

It took a while, but the de-dollarization on going now is a reality.

Apparently you were not around 20+ years ago or you would have known Europe and Japan were the major customers of Iranian oil not the US. If you think they both had a preference to pay their bills in dollars instead of Euro's or Yen you are sadly mistaken. There is no reason for Iran to have ever required payment in dollars for anything. in fact it is ridiculous they even accepted the dollar considering the US has had Iran on an embargo list since 1979.
 
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lol, the problem with the lower middle class is the lack of knowledge, education and/ or exposure. This to me has been the defining instance of the class struggle. You see, had u actually been an educated professional in the Oil & Gas business, you'd have fukking known that Oil & Gas have traditionally been priced and denominated in the USD, until the last 5 years or so, with the rise of the eastern block.

Iran had no choice but to market it's wares in that currency. The 'choice' to market it in anything other than the USD is a very recent phenomena, in case u were wondering. The US gladly purchased Iranian crude on the market via Canada, throughout the 80's and 90's, while u shopped around at Walmarts.......lol

Lets hope times are better for u now.

Apparently you were not around 20+ years ago or you would have known Europe and Japan were the major customers of Iranian oil not the US. If you think they both had a preference to pay their bills in dollars instead of Euro's or Yen you are sadly mistaken. There is no reason for Iran to have ever required payment in dollars for anything. in fact it is ridiculous they even accepted the dollar considering the US has had Iran on an embargo list since 1979.
 
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lol, the problem with the lower middle class is the lack of knowledge, education and/ or exposure. This to me has been the defining instance of the class struggle. You see, had u actually been an educated professional in the Oil & Gas business, you'd have fukking known that Oil & Gas have traditionally been priced and denominated in the USD, until the last 5 years or so, with the rise of the eastern block.

Iran had no choice but to market it's wares in that currency. The 'choice' to market it in anything other than the USD is a very recent phenomena, in case u were wondering. The US gladly purchased Iranian crude on the market via Canada, throughout the 80's and 90's, while u shopped around at Walmarts.......lol

Lets hope times are better for u now.

You are completely clueless. There is no requirement that Iran has to accept payment in dollars. if some country wants to send a planeful of Euro's or Yen as payment the only thing stopping them is Iran telling them they want dollars instead. Just because the price is in dollars doesn't mean they can't use a calculator to figure out the equivalent exchange rate price to convert into Euro or Yen. Are people in Iran paying in dollars at the pump?

When some Chinese tourist pays their bill using Chinese AliPay in Norway do you think it has anything to do with dollars? Their accounts are in Yuan and the payment gets converted to whatever currency Norway wants.

The major reason payments to Iran are in dollars is because dollars are easily convertible. Iran doesn't want a planeful of Zimbabwe currency because it would be useless to them. They want a planeful of currency they can use to buy other stuff. They can pick Euro just as easily as dollars.
 
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This is indeed big news now:

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Iran Inching Closer to Bidding Farewell to US Dollar
CC0
Business
10:53 01.03.2018(updated 10:54 01.03.2018) Get short URL
1261
Iran believes that the US dollar’s share in its foreign exchanges is insignificant and its replacement should be suitable for trade with important partners like the United Arab Emirates, Russia, China and the European Union.

Tehran has announced that purchase orders by merchants that are based on the US dollar will no longer be allowed in import operations moving the country a step closer to ditching the greenback in its foreign trade activities, Press TV reported.

Mehdi Kasraeipour, the director of the Central Bank of Iran’s Foreign Exchange Rules and Policies Affairs, said the measure had become effective as of Wednesday, February 28.

Kasraeipour added that the move would not create any problems for traders because the US dollar’s share in the country’s trade was rather small.

“For a long time Iran’s banking sector hasn’t been able to use the dollar as a result of the sanctions,” he said.

According to him, Iranian merchants will now need to inform their suppliers to change the base currency from the dollar to other currencies to make sure that all import documents can be properly processed at Iranian entry points, the agency wrote.

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© Flickr/ frankieleon
Iran Prepares to Ditch Dollar in International Trade
Many traders worry, however, about the costs that this policy could create for them and eventually the consumers as merchants will have to face extra expenses converting the base currency from the dollar to other legal tenders.
This would increase the costs for imports and eventually push up the prices of imported goods.

Iran’s emerging switch to non-dollar currencies comes at a time that outrage is building up in the country over an executive order by US President Donald Trump to ban Iranians from entering the United States.

Iran has already signed agreements with several countries including Russia, Azerbaijan, Turkey and Iraq to ditch the dollar and use mutual currencies.

READ MORE: Cashing Out: Why Has Iran's State Oil Company Decided to Dump the Dollar?

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Cashing Out: Why Has Iran's State Oil Company Decided to Dump the Dollar?
© Sputnik/ Mihail Kutusov
Politics
18:01 10.02.2016(updated 18:02 10.02.2016) Get short URL
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Tehran has taken revenge on Washington for years of US-driven economic warfare against Iran: the National Iranian Oil Company has announced that Iran will only accept payment in euros, not dollars, for its oil, F. William Engdahl notes, adding that Saddam Hussein had adopted a similar 'petroeuro' practice, prompting the US to invade Iraq.

On January 16, 2016 SWIFT (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication) announced that it was readmitting all Iranian banks into the payment system following an official report from the IAEA that Tehran met the requirements of the nuclear deal.

"The EU stated that European companies, including oil companies, were no longer prohibited from doing business with Iran. The Obama Administration, however, was not so generous. The US Treasury stated that 'the US embargo will generally remain in place, even after Implementation Day, because of concerns outside of Iran's nuclear program'," American-German researcher, historian and strategic risk consultant F. William Engdahl writes in his article for New Eastern Outlook.

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© REUTERS/ Erik De Castro
Welcome to the Club: Will Wall Street Tame the Chinese Dragon?
Washington's move hardly took Tehran by surprise: Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei has repeatedly claimed that Obama administration officials cannot be fully "trusted."
However, the Iranian leadership is not going to fret and fume over the White House's decision to lift only a portion of its sanctions on Iran. Instead, the Middle Eastern grandmaster has made its own move.

"In gratitude for 37 years of USA economic sanctions being lifted, on February 5… an official of the National Iranian Oil Company has announced that Iran will accept payment only in euros, not dollars, for its oil. The official added that that rule applied to newly signed deals with France's energy giant Total, Spain's refiner Cepsa and Russia's Lukoil," Engdahl points out.

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© REUTERS/ Jason Lee
Non-Dollar Trading: Emerging Economies Deal a Heavy Blow to Petrodollar
"Our top priority is to receive cash and oil demands in euros," Safar-Ali Karamati, Deputy Director of International Affairs for Marketing and Crude Oil Operation in the National Iranian Oil Company, told Shana on February 6, 2016.
Citing Iranian Minister of Petroleum Bijan Zangeneh, the media outlet elaborated Tuesday that foreign oil companies that owe Iran billions of dollars would be compelled to settle their debts in euros.

"Greece's Hellenic Petroleum, Italy's Saras and Royal Dutch Shell own Iran about $4bn which will be paid back to Iran in euros," Shana reported, adding that Emirates National Oil Company (ENOC), Japan and the Netherlands have started to repay their debt to the Central Bank of Iran.

"Why is this such a big deal, you might be asking? In and of itself it isn't," Engdahl remarks.

The crux of the matter is that Tehran's decision coincided with similar moves among other nations of Eurasia, most notably Russia and China. The countries are shifting from the dollar to national currencies in their oil trade. To add insult to the petrodollar's injury, Russia is planning to start trading Russian crude oil futures in rubles on the St. Petersburg Mercantile Exchange.

Moreover, Moscow is considering the creation of a new Urals ruble oil benchmark to replace the US-dollar Brent futures at the London ICE exchange, Engdahl emphasizes.

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© Sputnik/ Alexandr Demyanchuk
OK, Dollar? Russia Mulls Trading With China, Iran in National Currencies
The researcher calls attention to the fact that the dollar's hegemony is rooted in the petrodollar recycling system.
Engdahl's book "A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics" tells the astonishing story of the petrodollar's "birth" back in the 1970s.

"In December 1974, in strict secrecy, the US Treasury Assistant Secretary, Jack F. Bennett, later to become a director of EXXON, signed an agreement in Riyadh with the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA, the Saudi central bank). The mission of SAMA was 'to establish a new relationship through the Federal Reserve Bank of New York with the US Treasury borrowing operation. Under this arrangement, SAMA will purchase new US Treasury securities with maturities of at least one year,' explained Bennett in a February, 1975 memo to Secretary of State Kissinger," the researcher narrates.

That meant the US government was free to run almost unlimited deficits, since Saudi petrodollars would buy US debt, Engdahl explains.

Furthermore, Riyadh persuaded the OPEC oil states to sell their crude for US dollars only. In return, Washington supplied Saudi Arabia with modern American weaponry and turned a blind eye to the misdeeds of the House of Saud.

"The result was a dramatic revival of a sinking US dollar," the researcher points out.

Washington jealously guarded its interests. When Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein began to sell oil for euros, Iraq was invaded by the US and the undesirable regime of Hussein toppled. The petrodollar's hegemony was restored.

All good things must come to an end, though.

The emerging economies of the BRICS are moving away from the dollar and it seems that the end of the dollar-based world economy is around the corner.
 
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While meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in November, Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said that the best way to beat US sanctions against the two countries was joint efforts to dump the American currency in bilateral trade. He told President Putin that by using methods such as eliminating the US dollar and replacing it with national currencies in transactions between two or more parties, the sides could isolate the Americans.”:rolleyes:


https://www.rt.com/business/420197-iran-farewell-us-dollar/
 
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Trade wars !:D

The US will impose a 25 percent tariff on steel imports and 10 percent tariff on aluminum imports next week, President Donald Trump has announced.

“We’re gonna build our steel industry back. We’re gonna build our aluminum industry back,” Trump said in a White House listening session with industry executives on Thursday. He cited the success of the recently imposed tariffs on solar panels and washing machines.

“I don’t blame other countries” for taking advantage of bad trade deals made by the US, Trump said.

Executives have complained about “capital depletion” and pushed the need for a “level playing field” with foreign competitors.

“What’s been allowed to go on for decades is disgraceful,” Trump said, adding that without being able to make aluminum and steel, “you almost don’t have much of a country,” especially the defense industry.

The increase of tariffs comes amid US having demanded to negotiate NAFTA, its treaty with neighboring Canada and China, to make it more favorable to America. Trump has been also attacking the World Trade Organization recently as WTO head warned about the dangers of 'trade wars.'

https://www.rt.com/usa/420222-trump-tariffs-steel-aluminum/
 
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