The Prophet and the Hedge Fund King: How Sergei Glazyev and Ray Dalio Are Redefining Central Bank Reserves

I. Introduction: Two Voices, One Warning

On one side of the world, a Soviet-trained economist advises the Kremlin on how to dismantle dollar hegemony and build a new financial architecture for the BRICS nations. On the other, a Connecticut hedge fund manager who built the world’s largest macro fund warns investors that the old order is crumbling and that diversification into real assets is no longer optional.

They have never collaborated. They come from different intellectual traditions, different political systems, different generations. Yet Sergei Glazyev and Ray Dalio have arrived at the same conclusion from opposite directions: the era of dollar-centric reserves is ending, and central banks must diversify into assets that cannot be frozen, tracked, or debased.

This article explores their frameworks, their most recent works, and the striking convergence of their visions. It then argues that Ryo Currency—with its fair distribution, decentralization, and next-generation privacy stack—embodies the principles both thinkers identify as essential for the future of neutral money.

“The current dollar-centric system is structurally unsustainable and has been weaponized against sovereign states. We need digital assets that no single bloc can freeze.” — Sergei Glazyev

II. Sergei Glazyev: The Architect of Multipolar Finance

Sergei Glazyev is not a typical economist. A graduate of Moscow State University, he served as Minister of Foreign Economic Relations in the early 1990s, then as a member of the Russian State Duma, and later as an advisor to President Vladimir Putin on economic integration. He is a full member of the Russian Academy of Sciences and has authored dozens of books and papers on economic theory, monetary policy, and the transition to a multipolar world order [1].

The Global Monetary System in Crisis

In his seminal work, The Global Monetary System in Crisis, Glazyev lays out a comprehensive critique of the dollar-centric financial architecture. His argument proceeds in three stages:

  1. Diagnosis: The current system is inherently unstable because it concentrates power in a single issuer, creating perverse incentives for that issuer to abuse its privileged position. The weaponization of the dollar through sanctions is not an aberration—it is the logical outcome of a system designed without checks and balances [1].
  2. Prescription: A new international monetary architecture must be based on a basket of national currencies and commodities, with settlement via digital platforms not controlled by any single bloc. Glazyev envisions a transition to a multipolar financial order where trade is settled in national currencies, gold, or digital assets that no single bloc can freeze [1].
  3. Implementation: The BRICS nations are already building the infrastructure. The “Unit” project—a benchmark token anchored in gold and BRICS+ currencies—is emerging as one such initiative, set to launch on the Cardano blockchain. Multi-CBDC settlement layers like mBridge have already processed tens of billions in cross-border transactions [1].

Glazyev’s key phrase—“digital assets that no single bloc can freeze”—has become a rallying cry for those seeking alternatives to the dollar system. It captures the essential requirement for any neutral reserve asset in a fragmented world: it must exist outside the jurisdictional reach of any single power.

“We must ensure a full-fledged switch to national currencies in mutual trade and investment within the EAEU and the CIS, and further—within the BRICS and SCO, the withdrawal of joint development institutions from the dollar zone, the development of their own independent payment systems.” — Sergei Glazyev, Regulations of the Noonomy

Glazyev’s Vision for Central Bank Reserves

For Glazyev, central bank reserves are not merely technical holdings—they are instruments of sovereignty. A nation that holds its reserves in dollars subjects itself to the monetary policy and political whims of the United States. The freezing of Russian assets in 2022 proved that no amount of legal protection can safeguard dollar holdings when geopolitical tensions escalate [2].

The solution, in Glazyev’s framework, is diversification into assets that are:

  • Non-sovereign: Not issued or controlled by any single state.
  • Commodity-backed: Anchored in real value, not just debt.
  • Digitally transferable: Capable of moving across borders without friction.
  • Censorship-resistant: Unable to be frozen or seized by any bloc.

These criteria point toward gold, certainly, but also toward a new class of digital assets that combine gold-like neutrality with digital-era portability and privacy.

III. Ray Dalio: The Debt Cycle and the Search for Neutrality

Ray Dalio needs little introduction. Founder of Bridgewater Associates, the world’s largest hedge fund, he has spent five decades studying economic cycles and building algorithms to predict them. His books—Principles, Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order, and Principles for Navigating Big Debt Crises—have become required reading for investors and policymakers worldwide [3].

The Debt Supercycle Thesis

Dalio’s framework begins with a simple observation: debt cannot compound forever. Every economic cycle brings borrowing, spending, and growth, but each cycle leaves behind higher debt levels. Over decades, these cycles compound into a “supercycle” where debt burdens become unsustainable, forcing policymakers to choose between inflationary money printing and deflationary debt crises [3].

In his most recent writings, Dalio warns that the world is entering the late stages of this supercycle. U.S. national debt has reached approximately $38.9 trillion, rising at a pace of roughly $2.6 trillion per year. Global debt sits at 235% of world GDP—levels historically associated with financial repression, inflationary finance, or default [4].

The Rise of China and the Decline of Hegemony

In Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order, Dalio applies his cycle framework to geopolitics. He argues that the United States is in a period of relative decline, while China is rising to challenge its hegemony. This is not a political judgment but an observation of historical patterns: empires rise and fall in predictable cycles, and the current transition is following those patterns closely [5].

For investors and central banks, this transition has profound implications. The dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency—a status it has held since 1944—is not guaranteed. As rival powers develop alternative payment systems and accumulate alternative reserves, the structural demand for dollars will erode.

Evidence of this shift is already visible in global reserve data. According to the IMF’s COFER database, the share of global foreign exchange reserves held in U.S. dollars has declined from roughly 71% in 1999 to around 58% today. While the dollar remains dominant, the long-term trend reflects a gradual diversification by central banks seeking to reduce exposure to a single monetary system.

Dalio on Bitcoin: The Embedded Video

In a November 2025 interview, Dalio addressed Bitcoin directly. His assessment, captured in the video below, is characteristically blunt and analytically precise:

This assessment is crucial. Dalio does not dismiss Bitcoin out of hand—he acknowledges its role as a speculative asset and a potential store of value. But he identifies two fatal flaws for its use as a reserve currency: traceability and hackability. A reserve asset must be private enough that its holders can transact without revealing strategic intentions. And it must be secure enough that no single point of failure can compromise the network.

Dalio’s Advice to Central Banks

In his investor communications, Dalio consistently advises diversification “internationally rather than relying solely on one currency or economy” and recommends holding “real assets such as gold, commodities, and inflation-linked securities” [3]. The logic is simple: when the old order fractures, assets that are not someone else’s liability retain their value.

IV. The Convergence: What Central Banks Actually Need

Glazyev and Dalio approach the problem from different angles, but their prescriptions converge on a common set of requirements for neutral reserve assets.

From Glazyev: Assets That Cannot Be Frozen

The Russian experience of 2022 proved that dollar holdings are vulnerable to seizure. Central banks that hold reserves in dollars or euros are effectively extending credit to those currency issuers—and credit can be revoked. Glazyev’s insistence on assets that “no single bloc can freeze” reflects this reality. A neutral reserve asset must exist outside the jurisdictional reach of any single power [1].

From Dalio: Assets That Cannot Be Tracked

Dalio’s critique of Bitcoin highlights a different requirement: privacy. A central bank executing large-scale currency operations cannot afford to have those transactions visible on a public ledger. Blockchain analytics firms would detect the activity, markets would react, and strategic intentions would be exposed. For a reserve asset to function, it must offer privacy by default, not optional anonymity [6].

The Four Requirements Synthesized

Combining the insights of both thinkers, we can identify four essential properties that any neutral reserve asset must possess:

  1. Non-Sovereign: Not issued or controlled by any single state. Cannot be frozen or seized by any bloc.
  2. Private by Default: Transactions must be confidential, resistant to blockchain analytics, and free from surveillance.
  3. Decentralized and Secure: The network must be resistant to attack, capture, or coercion by any state or corporate entity.
  4. Fairly Distributed: No premine, no insider allocation, no venture capital control that could create a central point of failure or coercion.

Gold satisfies some of these criteria and has served as a neutral reserve asset for centuries. However, gold has a structural limitation in the modern financial system: it is difficult to move quickly across borders and cannot be transferred natively through digital settlement networks. In an era defined by real-time global finance, any reserve asset must combine gold’s neutrality with the portability and programmability of digital infrastructure.

V. Why Ryo Currency Meets Both Visions

Ryo Currency was architected from the ground up to meet these requirements. Its design choices, often framed in technical terms, align precisely with the criteria identified by Glazyev and Dalio.

Fair Distribution: No Premine, No Insiders

As detailed in Ryo’s egalitarian emission schedule, the protocol launched with no premine, no ICO, and no venture capital allocation. When the chain forked from Sumokoin, 8.79 million pre-mined coins were burned—permanently removed from circulation [7]. The remaining coins are distributed through mining, with an emission schedule designed for fairness. This means there is no insider class who could be coerced into freezing funds or manipulating the protocol. The network belongs to its users, not to any corporate entity [8].

Decentralization: ASIC Resistance and Global Mining

Ryo uses the Cryptonight-GPU algorithm, specifically designed to resist ASICs (specialized mining hardware) and botnets [8]. This ensures that mining remains accessible to ordinary participants with consumer GPUs, preventing the centralization of hash power that would make the network vulnerable to capture. For a central bank considering Ryo as a reserve asset, this decentralization means that no single government or corporation can shut down the network or freeze its holdings.

Next-Generation Privacy: Halo 2 and the Mixnet

While earlier privacy coins relied on RingCT—a technology that provides reasonable privacy but has known limitations and vulnerabilities to statistical analysis—Ryo’s roadmap looks to the next generation. The protocol is transitioning to generation-2 zero-knowledge proofs (Halo 2), which eliminate trusted setup assumptions and provide mathematically perfect privacy [9].

Halo 2, developed by the Electric Coin Company and adopted by multiple privacy-focused projects, enables recursive zero-knowledge proofs without the need for a trusted setup. This means that transaction privacy is based purely on mathematics, not on assumptions about the honesty of setup participants. For a central bank, this eliminates the risk that a trusted setup could be compromised or coerced [9].

Combined with a high-latency mixnet that obfuscates network-level metadata, Ryo will offer anonymity guarantees that far exceed first-generation privacy coins. The mixnet routes traffic through multiple nodes, adding delays and reordering packets, making traffic analysis impractical. For a central bank executing large-scale currency operations, this means that not only the transaction details but also the fact of the transaction itself can be hidden from surveillance.

Why This Matters for Central Banks

A central bank holding Ryo can execute large-scale currency operations without revealing strategic intentions. It can move value between blocs without triggering surveillance or sanctions. It can hold reserves in an asset that is not someone else’s liability and cannot be frozen by any rival power. These capabilities directly address the concerns raised by both Glazyev and Dalio.

VI. Practical Implications: Ryo as a Reserve Asset

How would central banks actually acquire and hold Ryo? Several channels exist, ranging from direct participation to institutional-grade acquisition methods:

Direct Mining Operations

Central banks could acquire Ryo by operating mining facilities, contributing to network security while accumulating coins through block rewards. This is analogous to how some central banks acquire gold through domestic production or sovereign mining enterprises. A nation with excess energy capacity could establish GPU mining farms as a strategic reserve accumulation mechanism, similar to how China accumulated Bitcoin through mining before the 2021 ban.

Institutional OTC Desks

Large blocks of Ryo can be acquired through over-the-counter markets without moving the spot price. Sovereign wealth funds and central banks routinely use OTC channels for large acquisitions of gold, currencies, and digital assets. Reputable OTC desks with institutional-grade compliance can source liquidity from multiple venues—including decentralized exchanges—while providing the central bank with a single, auditable counterparty.

Bilateral Agreements and Sovereign Swaps

Nations could agree to settle trade imbalances in Ryo, creating demand for the asset as a settlement layer between their respective CBDC systems. Two central banks could establish a swap line denominated in Ryo, using it as a neutral bridge currency without either party needing to acquire it through open markets. This approach mirrors how central banks use swap lines in traditional currencies today.

Proprietary Trading Platforms

A technologically advanced central bank could build its own trading platform to acquire Ryo in a controlled, compliant manner. China’s central bank, for example, has the technical capacity to develop an exchange that connects to global liquidity while maintaining full audit trails and compliance with domestic regulations. This approach gives the central bank maximum control over the acquisition process.

Indirect Exposure Through Sovereign Wealth Funds

Rather than holding Ryo directly on its balance sheet, a central bank could mandate that its sovereign wealth fund allocate a portion of its portfolio to privacy-preserving digital assets. This creates a buffer layer—the central bank maintains deniability while still benefiting from diversification into neutral assets.

Custody and Security

Once acquired, Ryo can be held in wallets controlled by the central bank, with the same security protocols used for other digital assets. The privacy features ensure that the central bank’s holdings and transaction patterns remain confidential—a critical requirement for executing large-scale currency operations without triggering market speculation. Custody solutions could include cold storage in sovereign vaults, with transaction authorization requiring multiple signatories across different government departments.

VII. Conclusion: The Unlikely Consensus

Sergei Glazyev sits in Moscow, advising the Kremlin on how to build a financial system independent of Western control. Ray Dalio sits in Connecticut, managing billions for institutional investors seeking to preserve wealth through the coming transition. They have never met. They speak different languages, literally and metaphorically.

Yet their analysis converges on the same conclusion: the old monetary order is ending, and the new order will require assets that are neutral, private, and resistant to control by any single bloc. Gold meets some of these criteria, but it lacks digital portability. Bitcoin offers portability but fails the privacy test. Regulated stablecoins are part of the problem, not the solution.

Ryo Currency, with its fair distribution, decentralized mining, and next-generation privacy stack—Halo 2 zero-knowledge proofs and a high-latency mixnet—embodies the principles both thinkers identify as essential. It is not a speculative asset for traders. It is infrastructure for a multipolar world.

In the first article of this series, we examined the human stakes of the coming bloc system—the refugees, dissidents, and excluded who will need tools for financial survival [10]. In this second, we have seen the convergence of Eastern and Western thinkers on the need for neutral assets. The next article we will explore the systemic collapse of the free-floating fiat system and the emergence of digital monetary blocs

The old world is gone. The new world requires new tools. The question is whether central banks—and the individuals they serve—will recognize the tools when they see them.

VIII. Call to Action

  • Read Sergei Glazyev’s The Global Monetary System in Crisis and Ray Dalio’s Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order. Understand the frameworks that are shaping the future of money.
  • Explore the technology behind Ryo Currency. Study the Halo 2 zero-knowledge proof implementation and the high-latency mixnet architecture.
  • Prepare for a world where access to the financial system cannot be taken for granted. Consider what assets you would hold if your own currency were debased, your own wallet frozen, your own transactions surveilled.

The era of free-floating fiat is over. The era of blocs has begun. The only question is whether you will have the tools to move between them.

References & Further Reading

This article is the third in a four-part series. Read the first: The Yuan Ultimatum. Read the second: The Human Chokepoint. The next article will explore the technical architecture of neutral bridge assets.

 

 

In every monetary crisis, one question resurfaces: What form of money survives when institutional trust fractures?

In March 2026, that question is no longer theoretical. Missiles are flying across the Middle East as the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran has escalated into open war, with the Strait of Hormuz under repeated threat and commercial shipping under attack.[1][2] The choke point for a fifth of the world’s traded oil has experienced repeated closures, and energy markets are repricing geopolitical risk in real time.[4]

This conflagration collides with a global debt architecture already at late-cycle extremes. U.S. national debt is now approaching 39 trillion dollars, rising at a pace of roughly 2.6 trillion a year.[6] According to updated IMF debt data, total global debt sits just above 235 percent of world GDP, while public debt alone has climbed to nearly 93 percent — a level typically associated with financial repression, inflationary finance, or both.[7][8]

History shows that monetary regimes rarely end in a cinematic collapse. They erode, are reconfigured, and ultimately get replaced as trust migrates to a superior store and medium of value. Metallic coins gave way to banknotes, banknotes yielded to digital ledgers, and now international contracts, collateral, and even law itself are increasingly encoded in software rather than enforced solely by courts and parliaments.

Within this transition, privacy coins form a distinct category: cryptocurrencies engineered to behave like digital cash — fungible, censorship-resistant, and private by default. In a world reorganizing into rival geopolitical and financial blocs, the market is again searching for neutral money. Privacy-preserving cryptocurrencies — exemplified by Ryo Currency — are positioned to become the bridge asset between incompatible systems, the neutral settlement layer beneath competing empires.

A World Splitting into Monetary Blocs

The post–World War II order relied on U.S. dollar primacy: global reserves in Treasuries, energy priced in dollars, and a clearing system anchored in New York and London.[8] That architecture is now being challenged by a rapid move toward multipolarity, intensified by sanctions and open conflict. On one side, the U.S.-led bloc continues to rely on dollar-based payment infrastructure; on the other, the BRICS+ axis—driven by China, Russia, Iran—pushes gold accumulation, local-currency trade, and alternative rails such as China’s e-CNY and cross-border platforms like mBridge, which has already processed tens of billions in CBDC settlements.[9][10]

China’s digital yuan has handled more than 3.4 billion transactions worth roughly 16.7 trillion renminbi (about 2.3 trillion dollars) by late 2025, underscoring how quickly a parallel settlement system can grow once state power commits to it.[9][10] When blocs harden, neutral assets start to matter more than aligned assets. Gold served that role for centuries; in the digital era, privacy coins inherit that function—with orders of magnitude more portability.

The Debt Supercycle and the Post-Fiat Squeeze: Voices from East and West

Macro thinkers from different intellectual traditions converge on one inescapable diagnosis: we are living through the endgame of a long debt supercycle. Ray Dalio has charted how major reserve systems follow multi-decade cycles in which debt compounds far faster than real output, compelling policymakers to engineer a reset through inflation, financial repression, or currency devaluation. Egon von Greyerz describes the entire post-1971 fiat experiment as now entering its terminal phase, where desperate governments will turn to unlimited money printing and face mounting hyperinflation risks. Jim Rickards zeroes in on hidden liquidity traps and the potential for an “ICE9” credit freeze—a sudden, total lock-up of the financial system—forcing dramatic gold repricing as the only viable escape valve. Gregory Mannarino warns of an imminent credit freeze that will paralyze the system, igniting public outrage and possible revolt, while the powerful stand ready with pre-planned “solutions” to impose even greater control. Simon Hunt and fellow analysts stress that these monetary fractures are being violently accelerated by energy and resource shocks—the very disruptions now unfolding as war engulfs major producers and vital shipping lanes.

From the Eurasian perspective, Russian economist Sergei Glazyev—a longtime advisor to Vladimir Putin—argues that the current dollar-centric system is structurally unsustainable and has been weaponized against sovereign states. He advocates for a new international monetary architecture based on a basket of national currencies and commodities, with settlement via digital platforms not controlled by the West. Glazyev envisions a transition to a multipolar financial order where trade is settled in national currencies, gold, or digital assets that no single bloc can freeze.[41] This phrase captures the essence of what neutral money means in an era of financial warfare.

Similarly, Chinese financial analysts and officials emphasize that the digital yuan is not merely a domestic payment tool but a foundational element of a multipolar reserve system. They argue that e-CNY enables trade settlements independent of SWIFT and dollar-based clearing, enhancing monetary sovereignty. The People’s Bank of China has framed the digital currency as a public good that can improve cross-border efficiency, while noting that it operates within a legal framework that ensures stability and security. These views, while emerging from different political systems, converge on the same diagnosis: the old order is fracturing, and new instruments—both state-issued and private—will fill the void.

The United States: From Skepticism to “Crypto President”

In stark contrast to the Eastern push for de-dollarization, the United States has undergone a dramatic political realignment regarding digital assets. President Donald Trump, now in his second term, has declared himself the “Crypto President” and made digital assets a pillar of his economic agenda. The landmark GENIUS Act (Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins) and the Clarity Act have created a comprehensive federal framework for stablecoins and digital asset markets, replacing the patchwork of state-level regulations. Most significantly, the administration has announced plans for a U.S. Crypto Strategic Reserve, initially funded with Bitcoin seized in law enforcement actions, with proposals to acquire additional assets over time. This reserve is framed as a digital Fort Knox—a hedge against inflation and a signal that the U.S. intends to lead the global crypto economy rather than cede ground to China or the EU. Other nations, including the United Arab Emirates, Singapore, Switzerland, and Japan, have similarly advanced pro-crypto regulatory regimes, competing to become hubs for blockchain innovation.[42][43]

Yet even in this pro-crypto landscape, the money that flows through regulated U.S. exchanges and stablecoins remains tethered to identity and compliance. The GENIUS Act requires robust KYC/AML controls for stablecoin issuers, and the strategic reserve, while Bitcoin-based, is a state-controlled asset. The American approach embraces crypto, but primarily the transparent, traceable, and regulated layers of it. Privacy coins, by contrast, occupy a legal grey area—their very design resists the surveillance that regulators seek to preserve.

China’s Hardline Stance and the Eastern Bloc Grey Zone

While the U.S. pivots toward crypto integration, China maintains its firm anti-crypto stance. Since the 2021 ban on trading and mining, the People’s Bank of China has doubled down on the digital yuan as the only authorized digital currency. All cryptocurrency-related activities remain illegal, and authorities have expanded their blockchain surveillance to detect and block peer-to-peer crypto trades. Yet necessity may force interaction. Chinese firms and individuals seeking to move capital offshore, pay for imports from sanctioned nations, or engage in cross-border e-commerce that cannot be settled in e-CNY may turn to privacy coins despite the ban. The central bank itself, while publicly hostile, could theoretically acquire privacy coins as part of its diversification away from dollar assets—just as it accumulates gold outside official reserves. Holding a neutral, unfreezable asset like Ryo would align with Glazyev’s logic: an asset that no single bloc can freeze is valuable even to a bloc that forbids its citizens from using it. However, any such holding would be covert, never acknowledged, and likely managed through proxies.[44]

The picture is different elsewhere in the Eastern bloc. Russia, despite its own CBDC work (the digital ruble), has legalized crypto for cross-border payments and mining, viewing it as a sanctions-busting tool. India maintains a cautious but de facto tolerant stance: while it taxes crypto heavily and pushes its CBDC, it has not banned private ownership, and retail trading thrives. Iran uses crypto to bypass oil sanctions, and its miners are integrated into the global network. These countries occupy a grey zone: they are not fully crypto-friendly like Singapore or Switzerland, but they tolerate or even encourage crypto as a means of economic survival. For them, privacy coins offer a way to settle trade with counterparties in rival blocs without exposing every transaction to U.S. or Chinese surveillance.

The Neutral Bridge: How Ryo Connects the Blocs

Given this fragmented landscape—the U.S. embracing regulated crypto, China banning private crypto while possibly holding it covertly, and the Eastern grey zone using crypto for sanctions evasion—how would a neutral bridge like Ryo function?

Ryo as the settlement layer between incompatible systems:

  • Hub-and-spoke model: A Russian energy exporter, paid in rubles or digital rupees, wants to acquire U.S. dollars or stablecoins to pay a supplier in a third country. Instead of going through sanctioned channels, it converts local currency to Ryo on a non-custodial exchange, then swaps Ryo for USDT. The U.S. supplier receives stablecoins without ever touching a sanctioned entity—the bridge asset (Ryo) severs the audit trail.
  • Dual-currency circuit: An Indian IT firm provides services to a Chinese client. Neither wants to use e-CNY (surveilled) nor USDT (potentially freezeable). They agree on Ryo as an intermediate: the Chinese firm acquires Ryo (despite the ban, via OTC or overseas entities) and sends it; the Indian firm receives Ryo and converts locally. The transaction is private, final, and cannot be frozen by any central bank.
  • AI-agent native settlement: An autonomous logistics AI, routing cargo through multiple jurisdictions, needs to pay for port fees, fuel, and insurance. It holds a multi-currency portfolio but uses Ryo as the default settlement layer for any leg that crosses bloc boundaries, ensuring that payment history cannot be used to blacklist the cargo or the AI’s owner.

In each case, Ryo acts as the liquidity buffer—it does not replace national currencies or CBDCs but provides a private, final settlement layer between them. Its neutrality is operational: because it belongs to no bloc, it can be used by all blocs without triggering geopolitical alarms. And because it is private, it leaves no permanent record that could later be weaponized.

From an Austrian lens, artificial credit expansion distorts price signals and leads to correction. As energy and food costs spike, governments face a trilemma: protect bond markets, subsidize households, or maintain currency stability. In prior cycles, capital sought refuge in offshore centers; but when missiles, sanctions, and cyber operations reach everywhere, the “offshore” of this cycle is increasingly not a place but a protocol.

CBDCs and Stablecoins: Efficient Rails, Embedded Control

On top of this unstable base, money itself is being re-architected. A closely watched study by the Atlantic Council found that about 130 countries—representing roughly 98 percent of global GDP—are exploring central bank digital currencies, with almost half in advanced development, pilot, or launch phases.[23][24] At least eleven countries have already launched functional CBDCs. China’s e-CNY remains the largest live experiment; India’s retail CBDC pilot has surpassed six million users and introduced offline and programmable features.[26]

Billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller captured the technocratic consensus: “the entire payment system will adopt stablecoins within the next 10–15 years,” arguing that fiat-backed stablecoins like USDT and USDC are simply more efficient, faster, and cheaper than legacy rails.[27] Yet CBDCs and institutional stablecoins share a structural feature: they are permissioned liabilities of identifiable issuers. India’s pilot already experiments with programmable conditions on transfers, and Chinese officials highlight the e-CNY’s potential for targeted stimulus and time-limited spending.[10][26] This is not neutral money. It is software that can enforce policy at the transaction level—enabling taxation at source, geofenced spending, or real-time sanctions.

Technocracy, Tokenization, and the Contest for Code

The rise of CBDCs coincides with a broader trend: power migrating from law to algorithms. Commentators like Aaron Day warn that a new technocracy—rule by credentialed experts operating through global institutions—is using climate policy, health regulations, and financial surveillance as pretexts to centralize control. In his framing, CBDCs are the operating system for a programmable compliance regime.[28] At the same time, major crypto firms argue the opposite direction. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has championed tokenization as a way to “strip away a huge amount of unfairness from the system” by opening access to assets that have historically been gated.[29] Both visions run on similar primitives: identity, ledgers, smart contracts, and AI-enhanced analytics. The difference lies in who controls the keys. Public, permissionless blockchains and privacy-preserving protocols can turn tokenization into a tool of inclusion. Centralized, permissioned chains tied to CBDCs can turn it into a tool of control. That is precisely where privacy coins enter the picture.

Intelligence as a Utility: The AI Monetization Race Between Blocs

While monetary infrastructures fragment, a parallel revolution is underway in artificial intelligence—and it will profoundly shape the demand for neutral, private money. Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, has articulated a vision that resonates across Silicon Valley and beyond: “We see a future where intelligence is a utility, like electricity or water, and people buy it from us on a meter.”[40] In this model, advanced AI models become infrastructure: you pay for each query, each reasoning token, each automated workflow. The meter runs, and the currency used to settle that meter becomes critical.

But will this “intelligence utility” be delivered uniformly across the globe? The answer depends on which bloc you inhabit. In the U.S.-led sphere, private corporations (OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, xAI) are racing to build frontier models and will likely monetize them via subscriptions, API credits, and metered billing—largely settled in dollars, stablecoins, or corporate tokens. The underlying rails will be the same permissioned stablecoins and CBDCs that Druckenmiller foresees. Your access to intelligence may depend on your credit score, your compliance with KYC, and your government’s foreign policy.

In the rival bloc—China, Russia, and their partners—the approach diverges. Chinese AI development (Ernie, Tongyi Qianwen, SenseTime) is tightly integrated with state priorities and the digital yuan infrastructure. The state could, in principle, provide subsidized or even free AI access to its citizens and allied enterprises, but only within the Great Firewall and under surveillance. Sergei Glazyev and other Eurasian economists have discussed a “socially oriented AI” where the state meters usage for planning, not profit. Access to advanced AI in this bloc may be a tool of statecraft—extended to friendly nations (Belt and Road AI), withheld from adversaries, and always linked to digital identity and CBDC wallets. The question “will China give the same AI to everyone?” answers itself: not without political alignment and not without the ability to switch it off.

The likely outcome is an AI divergence that mirrors monetary fragmentation. In the West, AI will be a corporate metered utility, paid for with programmable money. In the East, AI will be a state-aligned utility, also programmable but with different oversight. Both models, however, share a common feature: they tie access to intelligence to a specific monetary and identity system. If you cannot pay in the accepted token—or if your wallet is blacklisted—you lose access to the most powerful economic tool of the 21st century.

This is where privacy coins, and specifically Ryo, enter the equation. For individuals, small enterprises, or even AI agents operating across blocs, the ability to pay for AI services anonymously and without geopolitical taint becomes essential. An entrepreneur in a non-aligned nation may need to query Western models (for certain tasks) and Eastern models (for others) without revealing their identity or being cut off by sanctions. A neutral, private settlement layer—Ryo—can serve as the universal payment token for AI queries, transcending bloc-specific rails. Furthermore, autonomous AI agents managing supply chains or negotiating energy trades will increasingly seek out payment methods that cannot be frozen based on the agent’s origin or the data it processes. Intelligence as a utility demands money that is itself neutral and private. Ryo’s architecture—privacy-by-default, censorship resistance, and eventual ZK-powered scalability—positions it as the natural “coin for the AI age,” settling microtransactions for inference, training data, or agent-to-agent commerce without exposing the parties to surveillance.

Privacy Coins: Digital Cash in a Surveillance Century

Transparent blockchains like Bitcoin and Ethereum sacrificed cash-like privacy. Every transaction is public, every address linkable. Privacy coins engineer a different outcome. Using tools such as Ring Confidential Transactions, stealth addresses, and zero-knowledge proofs, they validate balances without revealing who paid whom, or how much. They restore three qualities: fungibility (each unit indistinguishable), censorship resistance (no central operator can block), and privacy (financial history stays hidden). In a world where CBDCs and compliant stablecoins are building an ever-denser surveillance net, the very existence of privacy coins keeps an exit door open.

Ryo Currency: Engineered for the Post-Fiat Era

Ryo Currency is a privacy-focused cryptocurrency built from the ground up as digital cash. It emerged in 2018 as a fork in the CryptoNote family, inheriting and extending the privacy research of Monero.[33] From launch, Ryo implemented Ring Confidential Transactions with a default ring size of 25, mixing every transaction with many decoys, concealing amounts, sources, and destinations.[31] The project positions itself around four pillars: privacy, decentralization, fungibility, and fair mining. Ryo uses a GPU-oriented proof-of-work algorithm (Cryptonight-GPU) designed to resist ASICs and botnets, keeping block production accessible.[34][35] With no premine or ICO and an emission curve inspired by real-world resource extraction, Ryo’s distribution model avoids many structural centralization pitfalls.

Crucially, Ryo’s roadmap goes beyond first-generation RingCT. The team has publicly committed to migrating toward second-generation zero-knowledge proofs, building on Halo-style constructions that enable recursive, scalable privacy while eliminating trusted setup assumptions.[36] In parallel, Ryo materials describe a high-latency mixnet to obfuscate network-level metadata and IP information, adding another layer of anonymity on top of on-chain privacy.[37] The result is a design goal: make tracing, monitoring, or linking Ryo transactions and balances practically impossible—on-chain and on the network layer.

The Neutral Money Doctrine

Across history, neutral money tends to outlast politically managed money during periods of systemic stress. Call this pattern the Neutral Money Doctrine: when states stretch their monetary privilege too far, markets gravitate toward instruments that are fungible, portable, and independent of any one issuer’s promises. Gold embodied that doctrine in the physical world. In the digital age, neutral money must satisfy an additional constraint: censorship resistance under pervasive surveillance. That is what privacy coins aim to provide, and what Ryo in particular is architected to maximize.

Table 1: Fungibility Across Monetary Eras
Asset Fungibility Portability Censorship Resistance Historical / Prospective Role
Gold High Low (physical) High (bearer) Neutral settlement between rival empires[12]
Fiat Currencies Medium High (digital banking) Low (issuer-controlled) National control, prone to debasement and sanctions[8][12]
Privacy Coins (e.g., Ryo) High High (digital, borderless) High (cryptographic + network-layer) Neutral bridge asset in a multipolar digital world[31][37]
Table 2: Censorship Resistance in the Digital Age
System Traceability Programmability Cross-Bloc Usability Likely Outcome Under Fragmentation
CBDCs Full (state visibility)[23] High (rules in code)[26] Low (bloc-specific) Fine-grained surveillance, financial repression
Fiat-Backed Stablecoins High (public chain + issuer KYC) Medium (blacklists, freezes) Medium (usable until sanctioned) Efficient payments, vulnerable to policy chokepoints
Privacy Coins (e.g., Ryo) Minimal (on-chain confidentiality + mixnets)[31][37] Low (user-controlled) High (not tied to any nation) Durable economic sovereignty, neutral settlement layer

The Post-Fiat Landscape: Two Paths, One Market Choice

As debt pressures build and blocs harden, the most plausible path is not a single collapse but an era of overlapping crises: chronic inflation, rolling banking stress, intermittent capital controls, and increasingly frequent use of sanctions. Under those conditions, two digital futures compete:

  • CBDC- and stablecoin-centric rails, where “money” is a programmable liability that can be surveilled, throttled, or rescinded.
  • Privacy-preserving, decentralized rails, where money is a protocol-level asset and users retain control over who can see or block their transactions.

In practice, a hybrid landscape is likely. CBDCs will dominate official settlement and tax collection. Privacy coins will handle flows that must remain off the political chessboard: cross-bloc trade, savings for individuals who distrust their own central bank, and high-risk jurisdictions where property rights are precarious.

Privacy Coins in the BRICS+/Global South?

In the emerging BRICS+/Global South bloc, three monetary experiments are visible: multi-CBDC settlement layers like mBridge, commodity-linked units of account, and regional stablecoins. These systems solve dollar dependence but do not deliver neutrality or privacy. Official Chinese statements frame the e-CNY as a tool to enhance monetary sovereignty and facilitate cross-border trade, not as a surveillance instrument. Yet the architecture—centralized, permissioned, and linked to digital identity—reflects a different philosophical foundation: money as an instrument of state policy rather than a neutral bearer asset. This is not a criticism but an observation of design intent. Both Western CBDCs and the Chinese e-CNY are optimized for state visibility; the difference lies in which state holds the keys.

Will these new systems interoperate with privacy coins like Ryo? Technically, it is straightforward: atomic swaps, nonKYC exchanges, DEX-based routing, and layered payment hubs can use Ryo as an intermediate clearing asset between incompatible CBDC systems. Politically, blocs may attempt to block these bridges, but well-designed privacy coins that do not depend on custodial intermediaries are extremely difficult to quarantine.[31][35] Ryo’s neutrality is an emergent property: a chain with strong privacy, decentralized mining, and no central operator can act as a buffer layer between incompatible monetary systems, absorbing flows from both blocs without being captured.

AI Agents and Machine Economies: Who Chooses the Money?

A new actor is entering this landscape: AI agents that can hold assets, execute trades, and negotiate contracts autonomously. These agents will not have patriotic loyalties. Given a goal (minimize fees, maximize privacy, obey or evade rules), they will choose the rails that optimize it. In a machine-driven economy, neutral, protocol-native assets become the lingua franca of autonomous trade. AI systems optimizing supply chains across hostile jurisdictions cannot depend on rails that can be frozen whenever geopolitics shift. They will gravitate toward assets and ledgers whose guarantees are enforced by math, not ministerial decree. Ryo’s design—privacy by default, fungibility, and a roadmap toward scalable ZK-proofs—positions it as a natural settlement layer for such agents. Read more: Autonomous AI Agents Need Private Money: The Infrastructure of Machine Economies

Tokenization on Privacy Coins: Liberation Instead of Panopticon

The same tokenization that Armstrong sees as a cure for market unfairness can either entrench technocracy or undermine it. On highly permissioned CBDC chains tied to digital ID, tokenization can reduce citizens to revocable access rights. On privacy-preserving chains, tokenization takes on a different character: confidential tokens can expand access without exposing every economic decision to analytics. A credit cooperative in a frontier market could issue private claims on productive assets, settle them in Ryo, and allow secondary markets without broadcasting members’ entire financial lives. This points to a crucial design choice: do we want capital markets where every position is traceable forever, or zones of legitimate opacity? Privacy coins provide the substrate for the latter.

Ryo as a Bridge, Bitcoin as a Beacon

It is a mistake to frame privacy coins as competitors to Bitcoin. Bitcoin is increasingly treated as a macro-reserve asset (scarce, transparent, globally recognized). Ryo and similar privacy coins are digital cash and dark liquidity: optimized for medium-of-exchange use, confidentiality, and fungibility. In a post-fiat environment, a plausible stack: base reserves (gold, Bitcoin), official rails (CBDCs, stablecoins), and a neutral bridge layer (privacy coins like Ryo for cross-bloc settlement, sensitive trade, and personal savings). Here Ryo does not need to “win” against state money; it simply needs to exist, remain uncaptured, and offer a superior option wherever privacy and neutrality are valued.

Economic Freedom in Your Pocket

The old model of protection was geographic: move to a safer country. In a world where conflicts and technocratic controls spread rapidly, that playbook is losing reliability. The new model is protocol-native freedom: economic autonomy that you can carry in a seed phrase or hardware wallet, independent of your passport. No elite residency program is required. A street vendor in Tehran, a freelancer in Lagos, a family in Buenos Aires can all access the same cryptographic guarantees—with no gatekeeper. That is the promise embedded in privacy coins, and particularly in projects like Ryo that explicitly design for high anonymity, fair distribution, and decentralization.

As the post-fiat renaissance unfolds, we are not merely upgrading payment rails; we are deciding whether money will be neutral infrastructure or a lever of technocratic control. CBDCs and compliant stablecoins will likely dominate official flows, as Druckenmiller and others anticipate. But the deeper story is that privacy coins like Ryo Currency embody a rival philosophy: money as a neutral, borderless bridge asset that belongs to everyone and answers to no bloc. In a fracturing world, that neutrality is not just a feature—it is the last line of defense for economic freedom itself.

References & further reading

[1] Day 13 of Middle East conflict — global economy disruptions, Iranian attacks spread to sea CNN 12 March 2026

[2] 2026 Strait of Hormuz crisis – Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Strait_of_Hormuz_crisis

[4] Iran war paralyzes oil trade, CBS News https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/iran-war/

[6] U.S. national debt reached about $38.9 trillion in March 2026 https://www.facebook.com/…

[7] Global debt steady at 235% of GDP as public borrowing rises https://english.ahram.org.eg/News/553247.aspx

[8] Global debt steady at 235% of GDP – DevelopmentAid https://www.developmentaid.org/news-stream/post/200148/global-debt

[9] China’s Digital Yuan Crosses US$2 Trillion in Transactions – MEXC https://www.mexc.com/news/506077

[10] What to watch as China prepares its digital yuan – Atlantic Council https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/econographics/

[13] Ray Dalio Debt Cycle explained https://www.cgaa.org/article/ray-dalio-debt-cycle

[15] Egon von Greyerz: (Hyper-) inflationary depression https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uX0-qDtsfmI

[17] Jim Rickards: Massive Fed’s Gold Revaluation https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFPBMtK1-dU

[20] Gregory Mannarino: central banks to hyperinflate https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q7dCgU_te6w

[23] Study shows 130 countries exploring CBDCs – Reuters https://www.reuters.com/markets/currencies/study-shows-130-countries-exploring-central-bank-digital-currencies-2023-06-28/

[24] Study shows 130 countries exploring CBDCs – China Daily https://www.chinadailyhk.com/hk/article/338236

[26] RBI’s CBDC Retail Pilot Surpasses 60 Lakh Users – ET BFSI https://bfsi.economictimes.indiatimes.com/articles/rbis-cbdc-retail-pilot-surpasses-60-lakh-users

[27] Stablecoins may become the future global payment infrastructure – Longbridge https://longbridge.com/en/news/279070352

[28] Aaron Day: Technocracy, CBDCs, and the Fight for Individual Freedom https://randybock.com/aaron-day-cbdcs-threat-freedom/

[29] Brian Armstrong Pushes Tokenization as a Fix for Market Inequality – MEXC https://www.mexc.co/en-IN/news/517135

[31] Ryo Currency official website https://ryo-currency.com

[33] ryo-currency/ryo-currency: Ryo – Privacy for eveRYOne – GitHub https://github.com/ryo-currency/ryo-currency

[34] 【ANN】【RYO】【Cryptonight-GPU】 RyoCurrency – BitcoinTalk https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=4413010.0

[35] Ryo FAQ https://ryo-currency.com/faq/

[36] Halo 2 ZK Proofs – An Introduction – Ryo YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRqXzO0koPM

[37] Halo 2 ZK Proofs & High Latency Mixnet – Ryo YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JGyQFrwyC00

[40] Sam Altman on AI as a utility – various interviews / OpenAI blog 2025

[41] Sergei Glazyev, “The Global Monetary System in Crisis”, 2024; various speeches.

[42] GENIUS Act and Clarity Act – U.S. Congressional Record, 2025; White House fact sheet on Crypto Strategic Reserve, Jan 2026.

[43] UAE, Singapore, Switzerland, Japan crypto regulatory frameworks – various sources, 2025-2026.

[44] People’s Bank of China statements on crypto; interviews with PBOC officials, 2025.