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Central Banks Are Buying Gold: Here’s What They See Coming

Most investors guess at what central banks are thinking. Joe Cavatone doesn’t have to. 

As senior market strategist at the World Gold Council, Cavatone surveys central banks globally for a living. In a recent interview on the Wealthion channel, he laid out exactly what’s driving their gold accumulation — and the implications are difficult to ignore. 

Alan Hibbard broke down the key takeaways. Here’s what stood out. 

Why Are Central Banks Buying Gold Right Now? 

The answer comes down to a loss of confidence in fiat currencies — including the strongest ones. 

According to Cavatone’s central bank surveys, institutions are responding to a combination of domestic inflation concerns, rising geopolitical risk, trade disruptions, and the threat of sanctions and asset freezes. Over the next five years, central banks are signaling a deliberate reduction in dependency on fiat currencies — the dollar and euro specifically. 

That’s worth pausing on. They’re not rotating from weak currencies into stronger ones. They’re reducing fiat exposure across the board. 

Part of what makes gold the destination is its institutional standing. Gold is formally recognized by the IMF as a reserve asset — a status silver does not hold [International Monetary Fund]. That distinction matters for how central banks are permitted to allocate reserves, and it’s a structural tailwind that has supported gold demand for years. 

What’s notable is how closely central bank concerns mirror those of individual investors. Inflation, geopolitical instability, government overreach — these aren’t purely nation-state problems. They’re household-level risks too. The playbook, according to Cavatone, translates directly to retail investors. 

Alan Hibbard

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Are Central Banks Trading Gold or Holding It? 

They’re accumulating it — and doing so with a long-term time horizon, not a trading mentality. 

That distinction matters more than it sounds. Short-term traders treat price dips as sell signals. Central banks treat those same dips as buying opportunities. The difference is the time frame: days versus years. Central bank gold demand has been structurally elevated since the Global Financial Crisis, with emerging market central banks leading the accumulation trend [World Gold Council, Gold Demand Trends]

Cavatone also addressed the recent price correction directly — and his take was counterintuitive. The 20% pullback wasn’t what surprised him. The 30% run-up that preceded it was. Leveraged trades, momentum buying, and speculative positioning — particularly in Asian markets — pushed gold well ahead of its fundamentals. The correction was a reset, not a structural reversal. 

His expectation going forward is a slow, gradual bull market driven by structural demand rather than speculation. For long-term accumulators, that’s a more durable setup than a vertical spike. 

What’s the Bear Case for Gold? 

Cavatone didn’t avoid this question, and it’s worth taking seriously. 

The scenario that could create meaningful headwinds: a severe global liquidity crisis forcing major central banks to sell gold reserves quickly. Cavatone cited sustained extreme oil prices as one potential trigger — a scenario where governments can no longer fund operations through fiat issuance and must liquidate hard assets instead. 

That sounds bearish on the surface. Both Cavatone and Alan framed it differently — as a generational buying opportunity. 

The reasoning: for that scenario to materialize, major fiat currencies would have to fail simultaneously, triggering economic disruption on a scale that’s hard to fully model. For investors who already hold physical gold outside the banking system and have a long enough time horizon, that’s accumulation territory, not a reason to exit. 

The bear case, properly understood, is a bull case with a longer fuse. 

Why Don’t More People Buy Gold? 

This was the most candid part of the conversation. 

Cavatone pointed to familiar obstacles: entrenched brand narratives, conflicting financial incentives among portfolio managers, and a general closed-mindedness toward gold as an asset class. 

Alan’s diagnosis went further. The biggest barrier isn’t logic — it’s tribe. 

Most people belong to social circles where gold is dismissed as a fringe idea. No yield. Tinfoil hat territory. And even when the math clearly supports ownership, people won’t absorb the social cost of breaking from their group’s consensus. It’s not an intelligence failure. It’s a social survival instinct — one that operates below the level of rational analysis. 

Understanding that dynamic is the first step toward getting past it. 

The Takeaway 

The person who surveys central banks for a living isn’t seeing a bubble. He’s seeing a structural shift away from fiat — one that’s been building for years, is now backed by a five-year forward signal from the institutions themselves, and still has room to run. 

The risks driving central bank demand are the same risks individual investors face. The response, according to Cavatone, is the same: accumulate, hold long, and don’t let short-term price moves override your time horizon. 

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People Also Ask 

Why are central banks buying so much gold right now?  

Central banks are increasing gold allocations in response to rising geopolitical risk, domestic inflation concerns, and a deliberate move away from fiat currency dependency — including the dollar and euro. According to World Gold Council strategist Joe Cavatone, central banks are signaling a multi-year reduction in fiat exposure, with gold serving as the primary alternative reserve asset. 

Is gold officially recognized as a reserve asset?  

Yes. Gold is recognized by the IMF as an official reserve asset, which is why central banks worldwide are permitted to hold it as part of their reserve portfolios. Silver does not share this designation, making gold uniquely positioned within the global monetary system. 

Are central banks buying gold to trade it or hold it long term?  

Central banks are accumulating gold for the long term, not trading it for short-term gains. This long-horizon approach means they treat price dips as buying opportunities rather than sell signals — a strategy that distinguishes them from speculative market participants. 

Why did the gold price drop after such a strong rally?  

The recent pullback followed an unusually fast 30% run-up driven by leveraged trades, momentum buying, and speculation — particularly in Asian markets — rather than fundamental demand. Cavatone noted the correction itself wasn’t surprising; the speed of the preceding rally was. 

What could cause central banks to sell gold? 

The primary risk scenario is a severe global liquidity crisis — where major governments can no longer fund operations through fiat issuance and must liquidate hard assets quickly. This scenario would require simultaneous fiat currency failure across multiple large economies, something most analysts consider a tail risk rather than a baseline outcome. 


Sources
https://www.imf.org/en/about/factsheets/sheets/2022/gold-in-the-imf
https://www.gold.org/goldhub/research/gold-demand-trends

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.    

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