Iraq Dinar 〈CERTIFIED · SERIES〉

: U.S. authorities and the Supreme Court have documented various fraud cases where sellers use false revaluation rumors to sell dinars to retail investors at high markups. Economic Challenges

: Iraqi oil revenues are held at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York . Recent tightening of international transfer rules by the U.S. to prevent money laundering has led to dollar shortages and a gap between official and "street" exchange rates. IRAQ DINAR

: Budget deficits and the high cost of public sector payrolls have occasionally forced the government to consider devaluations to manage liquidity. Recent tightening of international transfer rules by the U

: A persistent online community promotes the theory of an imminent "Global Currency Reset," claiming the IQD will suddenly return to its pre-1990 value (over $3.00). : A persistent online community promotes the theory

: Introduced in 1932 to replace the Indian rupee, the dinar was initially at par with the British pound. In 1959, it shifted its peg to the U.S. dollar at a rate of IQD 1 = $2.80, eventually rising to over $3.20 before the 1990 Gulf War.