Rebirth: Super Banking System Chapter 2521 - 2359: Stirring Up Trouble

~3 minute read · 751 words
Previously on Rebirth: Super Banking System...
The female assistant speculated that Qin Shiqi enjoyed high-level backing from Tianyan Group's top executives, allowing her smooth integration. Qin Shiqi adapted quickly to her internship assistant role, handling light duties on her first day. Yantang University fourth-year interns began placements with enthusiastic corporate reception and job offers. Tang Qing designed projects enhanced by spatial upgrades while monitoring global events, including a low-risk disease in Mozambique. In Congo Gold, Mr. Angke rebuffed EU lobbying to adopt euros for trade, favoring the Asia Dollar and preparing to repay euro debts.

Not long afterward.

Exiting the estate.

"Pah!"

"What a joke. Back then, you were nothing more than our dog. Now that you've flipped the script, you dare to act so cocky. Let's see how long you can sustain it."

The guest spat curses.

His words fell on deaf ears.

Completely unmoved.

This infuriated him greatly. Angke skipped all pleasantries, rejecting outright. His stance was firm. The man departed in frustration.

At that instant.

The EU's persuasion efforts struck him as a total flop.

Bastard.

Xie Te.

Damned fool.

These people were far too obstinate, dead set on sticking with the Asia Dollar. What gives a tiny Southeast Asian nation the gall to pit its money against the Euro?

Humph!

Just wait for the market plunge; I'll crush you eventually.

...

Once the tirade ended.

"Sigh!"

He sighed in resignation. If they refused, could he shove it down their throats? He wasn't alone; lobbyists to other governments returned empty-handed too.

Largely brushed off.

Even promised loans proved useless.

"World Association Organization!"

"Damn them."

He swore once more.

Membership demanded capping government debts in non-Asia Dollar currencies. Expansion triggered instant loan cuts from Myanmar.

Crucially.

These offered ultra-low interest annually. The EU couldn't match that yearly, making Asia Dollar far more appealing here.

Besides.

It tied to intentions.

Borrowing Euros.

Obviously.

Projects favored EU firms, yet costs soared. Imports, exports, constructions—all lacked edge.

Hence.

The bind grew excruciating.

...

With the envoy gone.

Estate.

Angke smirked. Asia Dollar's ascent left him pessimistic about the Euro, especially in Africa and beyond.

Key point.

Developing nations traded mostly low-to-mid goods, not high-tech. Congo Gold craved basics.

Food.

Cheap daily goods.

Massive infrastructure.

Clearly.

Asia Dollar purchases proved cheaper. Backed by Huaxia's factory might, building excelled in speed and quality.

Thus.

Euro.

Dollar.

What use at this growth phase? Once, he'd tout value storage, hard assets. Asia Dollar? Never.

But now.

Times shifted. Backers insisted. Alliance pivot fueled his Asia Dollar faith.

His task.

Obey directives.

Scoop firms, surge ahead, amplify impact. Pondering backers awed Angke—their might was immense.

Now.

He knew African import/export outfits like his merged under these shadows.

Not dumb.

Though unspoken.

Still.

Their quick nods screamed self-interest. Soon, Asia Dollar's slice would soar anew.

...

July's close.

United States.

A top agency dropped three reports rapidly.

"First half of 2011: Myanmar firms ramped global buys, snapping over 10,000 companies, mainly trade outfits."

"First half of 2011: Hosts of traders ditched Pound, Euro, Dollar for Asia Dollars, surpassing one trillion total."

"Alert! Asia Dollar Invasion!"

Content.

Expressed grave worry over Asia Dollar spread.

Instantly.

Nations buzzed.

...

United States.

"Asia Dollar again? Aiming at Euro throne?"

"Fascinating."

"Pound's totally sidelined now."

"Haha."

"Back the Asia Dollar!"

"..."

Americans barely cared; impact nil. Dollar's global reign stood firm regardless.

Even.

Glee at rivals' woes.

Pound.

Euro.

Old foes. Kin or not, who minded. Profit ruled; their stumbles entertained.

...

United Kingdom.

Report data blanched faces.

Damn!

What's brewing.

Ignore it, get lapped. Analysis showed Asia Dollar trade payments spiking last month.

Speechless.

Fine.

Time to watch closer.

Downing Street.

Ten.

"Any reversal plan?"

"None."

Econ advisor shook head.

"Why not?"

"Mostly Myanmar Asia Chamber acquisitions. As Myanmar entities, they'll stick to Asia Dollar only."

"Fence-sitters? Myanmar Bank Group feeds them. No quick flip to old currencies."

"Plus."

"Non-beneficiaries chasing favor? Tough pull."

"Funds too scarce to rival."

"Before."

"EU tried curbing too, barely budged. Europeans abroad flipped even."

"Bottom line."

"Dire straits."

"..."

Post-brief.

PM massaged temples. Messes piled: Brexit lingered, now Pound peril brewed.

Logically.

Asia Dollar theft cost UK zilch directly—no fees lost anyway.

Yet.

Circulation drop dented prestige.

Shockingly.

Myanmar rampaged boldly, storming payment realms heedless. Enraging, powerless.

UK.

No more eternal empire.

Arm-wave rallies.

Faded glory.

Pray EU, US step up.

...

European Union.

Report sparked sneers, deeming it needless. Their Central Bank intel dwarfed it.

Reality.

Worse than stated.

Else.

No dispatching envoys. Effects scant; firms defected, pace quickened.

After all.

Enterprises linked tight.

One shifts.

Neighbors tag along. Asia Dollar's lavish global spree lured droves.

Stealth failed.

Go public.

Three days on.

Early August.

EU media unleashed barrages, fanning flames.

"Four years post-transcription fluid debut, nations near tech breakthroughs."

"Hence, Asia Dollar's desperate throes, grabbing loot via edge before crack."

"Myanmar buyouts confirm: final frenzy, dreaming of printing Asia Dollars to seize world riches."

"Caution!"

"Caution!"