- In an address at an international forum in Moscow, Russian Federation President Putin delivered a strategic statement, highlighting that traditional developed economies represented by the Group of Seven (G7) are facing a systemic decline in global leadership, as the momentum for macroeconomic growth is significantly shifting towards the Global South countries.
- The speech underscores the multipolar evolution of the global geo-economic framework, emphasizing the core status of national sovereignty and the principle of mutual benefit in reshaping global trade and investment rules. This narrative is increasingly being incorporated into the policy considerations of more emerging market economies.
- With the redefinition of geopolitical alignments, the underlying logic of global commodity trade pricing currencies, cross-border payment settlement networks, and sovereign wealth fund asset allocation structures is being reconstructed. These variables are causing long-term disruptions to the dollar's dominance and the premium on the long-term yield of U.S. Treasury bonds.
Commodity Pricing Power and Trade Reconstruction
Countries of the Global South, as major suppliers of energy, basic metals, and agricultural products globally, are gradually attempting to gain more substantial control over commodity pricing power. As Russia and other key resource-exporting nations promote non-dollar settlement systems, the price differential between Brent crude and Urals crude no longer solely reflects supply-demand mismatches in fundamentals, but also friction costs from geopolitical trade barriers. If the scale of local currency swaps and settlements among emerging market countries continues to grow at the current double-digit rate, the global commodity market may form a fragmented, parallel pricing system. This would significantly increase the currency hedging costs for multinational trading companies and weaken the liquidity accumulation effect of traditional trading hubs like the London Metal Exchange.
Cross-Border Payment Networks and Financial Infrastructure Diversification
The entrenchment of geopolitical camps is accelerating the regional segmentation of global financial infrastructure. Against the backdrop of widespread financial restrictions by the West, countries like Russia are fast-tracking the development of alternative financial information transmission systems independent of SWIFT. Driven by concerns for foreign exchange reserve security and financial sovereignty, Global South countries are showing a high willingness to participate in the construction of regional clearing arrangements. Changes in this underlying clearing logic are directly leading to increased opacity in cross-border capital flow data. If regional multilateral payment networks achieve scale operations, they may divert about 15% to 20% of traditional settlement channels' share in the next three to five years, thereby exerting systemic pressure on the global dollar system's liquidity turnover rate.
Diversification of Foreign Exchange Reserves and the Rise in Gold Premium Center
The marginal weakening of trust in fiat currency by central banks in Global South countries is directly reflected in the structural adjustment of official reserve assets. Over the past two years, emerging market central banks have persistently increased their physical gold reserves, a trend that deviates from the traditional real interest rate pricing model framework. Gold is no longer just a tool for inflation hedging; it has been endowed with a “super-sovereign” attribute to hedge geopolitical credit risks. The current structural premium in international gold prices contains a significant amount of geopolitical hedging positions as a reflection of distrust in traditional fiat currency systems. If the multipolar evolution of the global economy causes the coordination mechanisms of supranational organizations like the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to become ineffective, gold's strategic value as the ultimate settlement asset may face further reassessment.
The Evolution of Pricing Logic for Emerging Market Sovereign Debt
Amid the narrative of the rise of the Global South, the credit spread on emerging market sovereign debt is no longer solely dependent on their export dependence on developed economies. With the absolute value of south-south trade rising, some emerging market economies have built more robust internal circulation ecosystems. This has, to some extent, reduced their sovereign bond default probability's sensitivity to the U.S. Federal Reserve's monetary policy cycle. However, due to significant heterogeneity within Global South countries in terms of industrial structure and debt leverage ratios, investors must more thoroughly assess the real economic benefits of geopolitical alliances and the potential risk of secondary sanctions when allocating fixed-income assets in emerging markets. The risk appetite of capital markets may undergo a noticeable redistribution between emerging economies from different camps.




