The central bank has been increasing its gold holdings for 15 consecutive months, and gold reserves have reached $369.6 billion, setting a new high. The current macroeconomic environment is actually quite clear: The total US debt has surpassed $38 trillion, fiscal deficits are becoming long-term, the interest rate center is being negatively influenced by the debt scale, and the US dollar’s creditworthiness continues to weaken. 👉 In this environment, 95% of central banks worldwide are acting remarkably consistently—they plan to continue increasing gold holdings through 2026. China also understands that in the current global financial landscape, the US dollar remains the dominant currency. A large-scale, one-time sell-off of US Treasuries to aggressively dollarize is neither realistic nor wise. Maintaining a certain amount of US debt holdings while increasing gold reserves as a stabilizer is both a practical necessity and a strategic move. Currently, the US has over 8,000 tons of gold, while China has over 2,300 tons, accounting for only about 9% of its foreign reserves, far below the global central bank average, leaving ample room for replenishment. This is a very clear signal!
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⚡China has never held this much gold before—
The central bank has been increasing its gold holdings for 15 consecutive months, and gold reserves have reached $369.6 billion, setting a new high.
The current macroeconomic environment is actually quite clear:
The total US debt has surpassed $38 trillion, fiscal deficits are becoming long-term, the interest rate center is being negatively influenced by the debt scale, and the US dollar’s creditworthiness continues to weaken.
👉 In this environment, 95% of central banks worldwide are acting remarkably consistently—they plan to continue increasing gold holdings through 2026.
China also understands that in the current global financial landscape, the US dollar remains the dominant currency. A large-scale, one-time sell-off of US Treasuries to aggressively dollarize is neither realistic nor wise.
Maintaining a certain amount of US debt holdings while increasing gold reserves as a stabilizer is both a practical necessity and a strategic move.
Currently, the US has over 8,000 tons of gold, while China has over 2,300 tons, accounting for only about 9% of its foreign reserves, far below the global central bank average, leaving ample room for replenishment.
This is a very clear signal!