
More Central Banks Than Ever Plan to Build Up Their Gold Hoards
In a survey of 72 monetary authorities, 43% said they expected their gold reserves to increase, up from 29% a year earlier and the highest figure in eight years of data collected by the World Gold Council and YouGov. None anticipated a decline.
Central banks have been one of the most important drivers of a long-running gold rally that has seen prices double since late-2022. The pace of buying doubled after the invasion of Ukraine, when the freezing of much of Russia's foreign currency holdings highlighted the appeal of bullion as a reserve asset.
'There are some pretty big moves in some of these numbers,' said Shaokai Fan, global head of central banks for the WGC, a trade body representing gold miners. 'Western countries have stopped selling and emerging market countries have started buying, they're catching up and building more gold reserves.'
The overwhelming majority of respondents said they thought central bank gold reserves would increase globally over the next 12 months. The most commonly cited relevant factors for holding gold were its performance during crises, its role as a portfolio diversifier and a store of value.
Central banks have been mopping up more than 1,000 tons for each of the last three years, and are set to continue that pace of buying this year, according to consultancy Metals Focus. They have been net buyers for the last 15 years, reversing net sales that drove a decade-long bear market in the 1990s.
The buying helped gold overtake the euro as the second-largest asset in the reserves of the world's central banks late last year. US dollar assets, mostly Treasuries, extended a steady decline to reach 46% of global reserves.
Among the factors that threaten to accelerate the decline of the US dollar's share of global reserves are the country's yawning fiscal deficits, confiscation risk and speculation that foreign creditors may be treated less favorably.
All that stands to benefit gold. More than half of the central banks from emerging economies in the survey said that gold's lack of political risk was a relevant factor behind their decision to hold gold, while 78% cited its lack of default risk.
But the US dollar is not in danger of losing its status as the dominant reserve asset anytime soon.
'Central banks are looking at the dollar and the Treasury market with a little bit more care than they would earlier on,' Fan said. 'But I don't think that this is a sort of mad rush for the doors.'
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

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