Major Shift in the Financial System: Gold Overtakes U.S. Treasury Bonds in Global Reserves

A historic milestone in the structure of the global financial system: By the end of 2025, gold had overtaken U.S. Treasury bonds as the largest component of global reserve assets. With a share now of around 27 percent—up from 20 percent at the end of 2024—the precious metal has clearly left the U.S. securities, which slipped from 25 to 22 percent, far behind. This shift is more than just a footnote. It is the result of an unprecedented price rally, sustained central bank purchases, and a profound geopolitical realignment.

Valuation Effects vs. Physical Demand
Gold’s rapid rise to the top is largely driven by price movements. Nominal gains of around 60 percent in 2025 and about 30 percent in 2024 have catapulted the precious metal’s weighting on balance sheets.

If we adjust for this extreme price effect and use the prices from late 2023 as a basis, the picture becomes more nuanced: In this scenario, U.S. Treasury bonds continue to dominate significantly with 26 percent, while gold and the euro are tied at 16 percent each. Nevertheless, behind the pure valuation effects lies a solid, physical foundation.

Geopolitics dictates purchases
Central banks remain the driving force in the physical market. Although their demand recently fell slightly to 863 tons—just below the 1,000-ton mark of the previous three years—the official sector’s appetite remains unquenched. Notably, the largest purchases come from regions that are specifically arming themselves against external conflict risks.

Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, certain players have dominated the field: China increased its reserves by more than 350 tons. It was followed by Poland (320 tons), Turkey (220 tons), and India (130 tons). In 2025 alone, Poland once again secured the top spot as the largest buyer with around 100 tons, followed by Kazakhstan, Brazil, China, and Turkey.

The motives behind this massive accumulation are structural in nature. Nitesh Shah, chief commodities analyst at WisdomTree, points out that the freezing of Russian central bank assets has set a precedent. The politicization of the U.S. dollar and other G7 currencies offers a massive incentive for many countries to reduce their dependence on these currency areas.

Another crucial factor: spiraling government debt. Unlike bonds or fiat currencies, physical gold carries no counterparty risk—it is simply not the liability of another debtor.

Structural Limits of Gold Reserves
Despite this momentum, the sky is not the limit for gold. At the monetary policy level, the precious metal faces structural hurdles as an official reserve asset compared to major fiat currencies. It is price-volatile, yields no current interest income, and incurs storage costs.

The most significant difference from bond markets, however, lies in the lack of elasticity: the physical supply of gold is inherently limited and cannot be expanded at will to respond to short-term shifts in international liquidity.

Gold Outlook
This paints a complex but extremely solid picture for the gold market. Even though demand has slowed somewhat since the start of the year, the World Gold Council expects central bank purchases of around 850 tons for the current year. Regardless of shifts driven purely by valuation, the precious metal has impressively reinforced its role as an indispensable monetary asset in a world marked by tensions and debt crises. With a share now of around 27 percent—up from 20 percent at the end of 2024—the precious metal has clearly left U.S. securities behind, which slipped from 25 to 22 percent. This shift is more than just a footnote. It is the result of an unprecedented price rally, sustained central bank purchases, and a profound geopolitical realignment.