TLDR:
- Central bank gold holdings crossed $4 trillion, exceeding $3.9 trillion in foreign-held U.S. Treasuries in early 2026.
- Global central banks purchased 863 tonnes of gold in 2025, marking three consecutive years of record-level buying.
- Gold dropped from $5,608 to $4,676 amid Iran war inflation pressures, yet institutional price targets remain above $5,400.
- The 2022 freeze of $300 billion in Russian reserves triggered a structural move by central banks toward unfreezable gold assets.
Gold reserves held by the world’s central banks have crossed a critical threshold in early 2026. For the first time, the collective value of sovereign gold holdings — roughly $4 trillion — now exceeds the $3.9 trillion in U.S. Treasury securities held by foreign governments.
The shift represents the most consequential change in global reserve composition since the dollar displaced the British pound sterling decades ago.
Central Banks Drive Structural Gold Accumulation
The scale of central bank gold purchases has been consistent and growing. In 2025, central banks collectively bought 863 tonnes of gold. That marks the third consecutive year above 1,000 tonnes when unreported purchases estimated by the World Gold Council are factored in.
Poland added 20 tonnes in February alone. China’s central bank has maintained purchases for over 15 consecutive months.
Meanwhile, global gold ETF holdings reached an all-time high of 4,171 tonnes, reflecting broad institutional participation beyond sovereign buyers.
As analyst Shanaka Perera noted on social media: “The buying is not speculative. It is structural. It is central banks replacing the asset that can be frozen with the asset that cannot.”
The catalyst for this shift traces back to February 2022. That month, the United States and Europe immobilized approximately $300 billion in Russian central bank reserves held in Western financial institutions. The message to non-aligned central banks was direct — reserves held in foreign bonds carry political risk.
Gold Price Correction Masks Long-Term Momentum
Gold currently trades at $4,676, down from $5,608 in January. The decline stems largely from short-term war-driven market mechanics.
The Iran conflict pushed oil above $140, driving inflation and keeping the U.S. Federal Reserve’s rates at 3.50 to 3.75 percent. Higher real yields have temporarily made the dollar more attractive relative to gold.
The same conflict that is straining U.S. strategic influence at the Strait of Hormuz is, at least in the near term, supporting dollar strength through inflationary channels. Gold is therefore caught between short-term rate pressures and longer-term reserve diversification trends.
Major financial institutions have not revised their bullish outlook. JPMorgan and Wells Fargo project targets between $6,100 and $6,300. Goldman Sachs forecasts $5,400 by year-end. Institutional buyers appear to be accumulating during the dip rather than exiting positions.
The broader context remains unchanged. Gold cannot be frozen by executive order, does not settle through SWIFT, and requires no foreign custodian.
That combination of properties, rather than any speculative thesis, continues to drive sovereign demand. The $4 trillion crossover reflects a measured, ongoing rebalancing of global reserve strategy — one tonne at a time.
The post Gold Reserves Top $4 Trillion, Surpassing Foreign-Held U.S. Treasuries for the First Time appeared first on Blockonomi.
This articles is written by : Nermeen Nabil Khear Abdelmalak
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