Markets & Finance

Gold Overtakes US Treasuries in Reserves: What It Means

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Most gold coverage in 2026 has fixated on the price chart — the spectacular run from roughly $2,633 an ounce at the start of the year to fresh record highs above $5,400 by mid-year (Intellectia). That’s a legitimate story. But it’s not the most important one. The more consequential shift is structural, not seasonal: gold has overtaken US Treasuries as the largest share of global central bank reserves for the first time in three decades (BlackRock).

That’s not a headline about a commodity rally. It’s a headline about the architecture of the global monetary system quietly shifting under everyone’s feet.

The Trigger Most Coverage Undersells

The pivotal moment behind this shift traces back to 2022, when roughly $300 billion of Russian central bank foreign exchange reserves were frozen as part of international sanctions following the invasion of Ukraine (ISA Bullion). For reserve managers around the world — not just in Russia — that event functioned as a wake-up call: dollar-denominated assets held abroad are not unconditionally safe from geopolitical sanctions risk. Gold, by contrast, carries no counterparty risk; nobody can freeze a gold bar sitting in a country’s own vault.

That single realization has reshaped reserve management strategy globally. Central bank gold purchases averaged 225 tonnes per quarter between 2021 and 2025 — roughly double the pace seen from 2016 to 2020 (J.P. Morgan Global Research). BRICS+ nations now hold 17.4% of global gold reserves, up sharply from just 11.2% in 2019 (ISA Bullion).

Who’s Actually Buying, and Why the List Matters

Poland has been the standout accumulator, adding 20.2 tonnes in February 2026 alone, another 11.2 tonnes in March, and 14 tonnes in April — extending a rapid buildup that has added more than 360 tonnes to its reserves since 2023 (BestBrokers). China’s central bank maintained consecutive monthly gold purchases for 19 straight months through May 2026, even though much of this buying goes officially unreported to the IMF — analysts widely believe the People’s Bank of China continues accumulating gold “off the books” (ISA Bullion).

China’s motivation appears explicitly strategic rather than opportunistic. Chinese net gold imports jumped to 317 tonnes in the first quarter of 2026 alone — nearly triple the prior quarter — while the People’s Bank of China’s own reported purchases accelerated from roughly one tonne per month through February to eight tonnes in April (J.P. Morgan Global Research). J.P. Morgan’s own analysts frame this as part of a long-term Chinese project to build gold reserves as a foundation for establishing the renminbi as a credible alternative reserve currency.

A World Gold Council survey found a striking 95% of central banks expect to increase their gold holdings in 2026, up from 81% in 2024 and just 52% in 2021 — a trajectory showing accelerating, not plateauing, institutional conviction (BlackRock).

The Part of the Story Most Coverage Misses: Not Everyone Is Buying

Here’s an angle that gets consistently underplayed: this isn’t a uniform global stampede into gold. Several countries, including Singapore, Jordan, Mexico, and the Solomon Islands, actually reduced their gold reserves in 2025 — Singapore in particular emerged as a notable seller, likely driven by portfolio rebalancing decisions and a desire to realize gains after gold’s historic surge, rather than any lack of confidence in the metal (BestBrokers). Germany, for its part, has reduced its gold holdings every year since at least 2002, though its 2024 sale of just 1.1 tonnes was the smallest annual reduction on record.

This nuance matters for anyone trying to build a genuinely accurate picture: the de-dollarization and gold-accumulation trend is heavily concentrated among specific emerging-market and non-aligned economies — not a universal central bank consensus. Understanding which countries are buying and why is more analytically useful than simply citing an aggregate global purchasing figure.

Where Forecasts Diverge — And Why the Spread Is So Wide

Institutional price forecasts for gold currently show a genuinely unusual spread. J.P. Morgan projects gold reaching $6,000 an ounce by the end of 2026, and potentially $6,300 by the end of 2027 (J.P. Morgan Global Research). Morgan Stanley’s more conservative 2026 forecast sits at $4,400 an ounce (Morgan Stanley), while State Street projects a range of $4,750 to $5,500, and DWS targets $5,400 by mid-2027 (Discovery Alert).

A spread exceeding $1,500 per ounce between the most bullish and most conservative institutional forecasts reflects a genuine, unresolved analytical disagreement — not just differing house styles. The bull case rests on the idea that central bank reserve diversification represents a structural, policy-level shift rather than opportunistic market timing, making it fundamentally different from prior gold cycles driven mainly by retail or momentum investors. The more cautious case notes that gold’s roughly 245% rally from September 2022 to January 2026 is the largest percentage advance in modern gold market history — and historically, rallies of that magnitude have eventually triggered significant, multi-year corrections (Discovery Alert).

The Under-Discussed New Buyer: Stablecoin Issuers

One of the least-covered developments in this entire gold story is the emergence of stablecoin issuers as a genuinely new category of gold demand. As crypto markets have matured, some stablecoin issuers have begun holding gold as part of their reserve backing strategy — a development BlackRock specifically flags as part of the “early stages” of a new demand wave that also includes central banks and the broader AI infrastructure buildout’s effect on institutional portfolio hedging behavior (BlackRock).

What This Means for Different Audiences

For everyday investors: Gold ETPs still make up only about 0.17% of total US private financial assets, remaining well below prior peaks seen in the early 2010s, while private wealth gold allocations globally sit roughly 50% below levels seen a decade ago (BlackRock). That suggests meaningful room for incremental Western retail and institutional demand to grow, even after the current rally, if the structural de-dollarization narrative continues to gain mainstream acceptance.

For businesses managing currency exposure: The scale and persistence of central bank gold buying is one of several signals (alongside Fed communication policy changes and fiscal deficit concerns) suggesting continued structural pressure on the US dollar’s long-term reserve currency dominance — a trend worth factoring into multi-year currency hedging strategies rather than treating as a short-term news cycle.

For portfolio allocators: The unusually wide spread between institutional forecasts is itself useful information — it suggests treating any single gold price target as a scenario input rather than a confident base case, and sizing gold allocations based on its role as a portfolio diversifier and inflation/geopolitical hedge rather than as a directional price bet.

The Bottom Line

The gold price chart is the story most people are watching. The reserve-composition shift is the story that actually matters for the long-term structure of global finance. Gold surpassing US Treasuries as the largest share of central bank reserves for the first time since 1996 is a genuinely historic threshold — one triggered specifically by the 2022 Russian asset freeze and now sustained by a broad, if uneven, cohort of emerging-market central banks pursuing deliberate de-dollarization strategies. Whether the price keeps climbing toward J.P. Morgan’s $6,000 target or cools toward Morgan Stanley’s more conservative range matters less, in the long run, than the structural fact that the world’s reserve managers have permanently changed how they think about gold’s role in the global financial system.

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