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Just noticed something interesting about the gold market that most people are probably overlooking. China has been quietly accelerating its gold purchases in a pretty significant way—we're talking about 74.38 million ounces of reserves as of March, which marks 17 consecutive months of continuous buying. What caught my attention is the pace: they jumped from the usual 1-2 tons per month up to about 5 tons in March alone. That's a meaningful shift in strategy.
The timing is fascinating because this acceleration happened right when the US-Iran conflict sent shockwaves through the market. Gold prices actually crashed 12% in March—the worst monthly performance since 2008—due to liquidity pressures. You'd think that would scare off central banks, but China did the opposite. They became counter-cyclical buyers, which is classic central bank behavior when prices dip.
What was really happening in the background? A lot of emerging market central banks were forced to sell gold to shore up their forex reserves. Turkey alone liquidated about 60 tons (worth roughly $8 billion) through sales and swaps to stabilize their currency during the conflict. Poland and Gulf oil producers did similar things. But here's the key insight: these were tactical moves, not strategic reversals. They needed liquidity in the short term, not a fundamental shift away from gold.
Meanwhile, countries less affected by the turmoil—like the Czech Republic and Uzbekistan—were still accumulating. The global picture shows that when you look at the broader trend, central banks are still net buyers of gold, even if March was messy.
Here's what really gets me though: the official data we see is just the surface. When you dig into UK customs data and compare it against London vault holdings, you realize that roughly two-thirds of actual central bank gold purchases never make it into public reports. China's real gold demand is way higher than what the official numbers show. That hidden buying is probably the biggest support for the gold market that nobody's talking about.
So the conflict narrative? It's noise. The real story is that major central banks, especially China, are treating gold as a strategic asset and buying on weakness. That's the long-term bullish case that matters.