Economic news

China's Central Bank Maintains Gold Buying for 17th Month

BEIJING, April 7 (Reuters) - China's central bank stayed the course on gold purchases for a 17th ​consecutive month, data from the People's Bank of ‌China (PBOC) showed on Tuesday.

The country's gold holdings rose to 74.38 million fine troy ounces by the end of ​March from the previous month's 74.22 million.

The ​gold reserves' value fell to $342.76 billion at ⁠the end of last month, down from $387.59 ​billion a month earlier, data from PBOC showed. The ​drop marked the first decline in the value of China's gold reserves since May 2025, reflecting the steepest monthly ​fall in the price of gold since 2008, ​with spot gold dropping 11.52%.

Gold, considered a safe-haven asset at ‌times ⁠of geopolitical turmoil, was hit by inflation and growth worries as well as higher interest rate expectations after the United States and Israel launched ​a war against Iran.

However, ​steady buying ⁠by world central banks helped to support gold prices "during periods of volatility ​and limit downside at a time ​when ⁠investor flows soften," analysts at ING Economics said.

The PBOC, which halted an 18-month-long gold buying streak in ⁠May ​2024, resumed purchases six months ​later.

Reporting by Qiaoyi Li and Ryan Woo in Beijing, Dylan ​Duan in Shanghai Editing by Bernadette Baum and Tomasz Janowski

Source: Reuters


To leave a comment you must or Join us


More news


Back to economic news list

By visiting our website and services, you agree to the conditions of use of cookies. Learn more
I agree