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90% of the central banks surveyed cite inflation hedging, long-term performance, and diversification away from the dollar as reasons for their gold purchases. A structural anchor, not cyclical.
The Central Bank Gold Reserves Survey published in early July by the World Gold Council (WGC) reveals that 90% of the central banks surveyed cite inflation hedging, long-term performance, and diversification away from the dollar as the main reasons for their purchases. This figure is up from recent editions of the survey, consistent with an uninterrupted accumulation cycle since the war in Ukraine and the freezing of Russian reserves.
Spot price as of July 4, 2026: ~$4,050/oz on Comex. Net purchases by central banks: ~290 tonnes in Q1 2026 (WGC), on track for an annual total exceeding 1,000 tonnes for the fourth consecutive year. China, Turkey, India, and Poland remain the main declared buyers. Share of gold in global official reserves: ~22%, up from ~11% in 2015 (BIS), reflecting a slow but measurable shift in reserve composition.
The mechanism is structural, not cyclical. Since 2022, central banks in the Global South have been diversifying away from the dollar to protect themselves from monetary weaponization. The 2026 U.S. budget reconstitution, political pressure from the White House on Fed governors ([fil fed-warsh-post-powell](fil fed-warsh-post-powell)), and uncertainty over the Federal Reserve’s anti-inflation credibility prolong this thesis. Unlike in 2011, the current accumulation does not reflect a temporary inflationary fear but a long-term institutional doubt about the dollar anchor.
Structural defensive component: ~5-10% of the portfolio in physical gold or low-fee ETCs remains a standard framework. Listed miners offer higher beta but remain exposed to energy costs and mining jurisdiction taxation. Caution against overweighing on an already stretched trajectory.
Concentration of flows among a few opaque central banks: the PBOC only publishes quarterly and likely underreports its physical positions. A China-India trade dispute over critical metals could trigger tactical gold sales as an adjustment collateral. The WGC survey relies on a voluntary panel—possible selection bias.
Central banks’ gold accumulation is no longer a cyclical hedge but a structural shift in reserve management, driven by geopolitical risks and long-term doubts about the dollar’s stability.
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90% is a strong signal, but let’s be real-if every CB starts dumping dollars for gold, who’s left holding the bag when liquidity dries up?
Inflation hedge? Maybe. But if the dollar collapses, gold’s not exactly going to be liquid for most people.
If central banks are loading up on gold as an inflation hedge, why aren’t we seeing more retail banks pushing gold-backed products for regular folks?
Fed post-Powell: Kevin Warsh and the New Monetary Era