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World Gold Council: Central Banks Net Bought 19 Tons of Gold in February, China Continues 16-Month Streak of Accumulation

The core data from the World Gold Council’s February central bank gold purchase report, released on April 2, 2026. It reveals the steadfast confidence of central banks in gold as a “safe haven” amid global geopolitical turbulence.

📊 Key Highlights

Global Trend: In February, central banks net bought 19 tons of gold, a significant rebound from January’s 5 tons, indicating a demand resurgence.

China’s Pace: China’s central bank has increased holdings for the 16th consecutive month (since restarting in November 2024). As of the end of February, China’s gold reserves reached approximately 2,308.5 tons (74.22 million ounces).

Major Buyers: Poland was the largest single buyer in February (+20 tons); the Czech Republic has been buying for 36 consecutive months; Turkey and Russia were net sellers.

💡 Investor Perspective

Long-term Backing of the “National Team”: China has been “buying and buying” for 16 months straight. This isn’t short-term speculation but a strategic move toward de-dollarization and diversification of reserves. It provides the strongest support for gold’s long-term value.

Market Signal: Central bank gold purchases are a “slow variable” that supports gold prices. They won’t cause an immediate surge in prices but can effectively limit sharp declines. Considering the Iran situation you previously followed, the combination of safe-haven attributes and central bank buying forms a “double insurance” for gold prices.

Your Strategy: In today’s turbulent environment, gold (physical gold/Gold ETFs) remains a defensive component of asset allocation. Don’t expect it to skyrocket like meme coins; its role is to hedge against inflation and risk.

In a nutshell: Global central banks (especially China) are telling you with real gold that in uncertain times, gold remains their most trusted “hard currency.”
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