Central Banks Know Something You Don’t, And They’re Buying Gold to Prove It
By Kane White, CEO & Founder of Britannia Bullion
In a world where trust is shifting quietly and currency is no longer king, gold is quietly reclaiming its crown, rightfully so.
According to a recent survey by the World Gold Council, 95% of central banks say they plan to increase their gold reserves this year. Not consider. Not explore. They’ve made the decision. And that should make anyone holding purely paper assets pause and ask questions, I know I am.
The Real Reserve Currency
For decades, gold was regarded as a relic, valuable in times of war or crisis, but largely irrelevant in a modern financial system. That story is unravelling.
Today, gold is emerging not just as a hedge, but as the only true reserve asset not tied to political risk. The same survey indicates that most central banks anticipate a decline in their US dollar holdings over the next five years, a signal that trust in the dollar is eroding at the highest levels of global finance.
The reason? It’s not just inflation. It’s not just debt. It’s geopolitics, we see this everywhere!
From sanctions to tariffs to currency controls, the dollar is now viewed by many central banks as a political instrument, rather than a neutral store of value. Gold, on the other hand, does not negotiate. It does not belong to a nation or ideology. It simply is.
They’re Not Just Buying, They’re Bringing It Home
International tensions are also prompting central banks to repatriate their gold, withdrawing it from New York and London vaults and storing it within their own borders (if they can get it).
Last year, India repatriated over 100 metric tonnes from the Bank of England. Nigeria followed suit. According to the survey, 7% of central banks plan to do the same this year, a sign that even custodianship is now viewed through a security lens.
When central banks start worrying that their gold might not be accessible in a crisis, you know the rules are changing.
The Numbers Don’t Lie
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Gold has doubled in price over the past ten years
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It's up by circa 30% already in 2025
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It now accounts for 20% of global reserve value (compared to 16% for the euro)
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The dollar still leads at 46%, but momentum is clearly shifting
And if conflict continues to escalate, as seen with growing tensions in Iran, Russia and the Ukraine theatre, analysts suggest we could see gold spike beyond $4,000 per ounce before year-end.
Final Thought...
Gold doesn’t shout. It just shows. And right now, it’s showing central banks something worth acting on.
While the public is distracted by interest rates and inflation data, the most powerful financial institutions on earth are quietly moving into physical gold. Not ETFs. Not futures. Real metal. Owned. Stored. Controlled.
That’s not panic. That’s positioning.
Gold is poised for a surge (in my opinion), as it serves as a security and a Financial friend in times of need, always there when you need it. Unfortunately, I can not say the same about other areas.
Until next time,
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![]() Kane White
Founder & CEO | Precious Metals Specialist
Gold Bidder
Britannia Bullion
Montford Group
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