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China is continuing to buy gold — even as prices fall.
In March, the country’s central bank extended its gold-buying streak to 17 consecutive months, pushing total reserves to over 74 million ounces. The move stands out not because of its size, but because of its timing.
While some central banks have recently reduced their holdings, China is doing the opposite — steadily accumulating.
This is not a trade.
It is a signal.
Gold, unlike currencies, carries no sovereign backing. Its value lies precisely in what it does not depend on: political systems, monetary policy, or financial infrastructure.
That is why central banks turn to gold not when markets are calm — but when long-term uncertainty is rising.
According to analysts, China’s continued purchases reflect a strategic approach to reserve diversification, rather than a reaction to short-term price movements.
In other words:
The focus is not on gold’s price — but on what gold represents.
And increasingly, what it represents is a hedge against something larger:
Currency risk.
As global economic uncertainty rises and geopolitical tensions persist, the stability of traditional reserve assets is being quietly reassessed.
China’s actions suggest that this reassessment is already underway.
→ And gold may be returning to the center of global monetary strategy.
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