Gold Overtakes Euro in Global International Reserves

June 2, 2024

Sturdy central bank gold buying since 2009 and a rising gold price has grown the precious metal’s share of global international reserves to the detriment of fiat currencies. By the end of 2023 gold surpassed the euro and the next fiat currency to be challenged is the US dollar.

Image via Flickr, Bank of England gold vaults

Often when financial analysts draw charts on the distribution of international reserves they focus on foreign exchange (omit gold) and start when the euro was introduced in 1999. Based on such charts the dollar’s share of total reserves appears to be falling slowly, from a peak of 72% in 2001 to 58% in 2023. In addition, it seems there is not one specific currency that is competing with the dollar.

Chart 1. Typical chart of global foreign exchange reserves.

But why not include gold and look back as far as possible? By combining multiple sources, we get a glimpse of the dissemination of reserve currencies from 1899 until 1935 (both fiat and gold), and a full picture starting from 1950.

Chart 2. Global international reserves from 1899 until 2023. Data prior to 1950 are estimates. Special Drawing Rights are left out as these are irrelevant in the greater scheme of things.

This paints a whole different story. Instead of showing only the demise of the dollar at snail pace, the historic balance between gold and fiat currencies is revealed. It’s not the dollar that normally backs the international monetary system, it’s gold. Gold used to make up the majority of international reserves, even when sterling was said to be the world reserve currency before the dollar. In a chart covering more years but only gold and the dollar, the latter’s reign becomes even more relative.

Chart 3. Gold and the dollar’s share of global international reserves since 1880.

The above chart displays that the dollar’s share of total reserves has fallen to 48% in 2023—caused by a declining trust in “credit assets” (fiat currencies), due to worrying asset bubbles, escalating wars, and fear of inflation—while gold is making ground.

Based on personal calculations of official gold reserves that include covert acquisitions, for example by the Chinese central bank, gold's percentage of total reserves reached 18% in 2023, up from 11% in 2008. Gold has currently surpassed the euro, which got stuck at 16%. As the problems haunting fiat currencies won’t fade anytime soon it’s possible gold will overtake the dollar as well in the decade ahead (explained more detailed here).

Be sure not to miss the X-post below that includes a video illustrating the development of reserve assets since 1950 in a bar chart race!

Click to view the video on X.

Courtesy of GainesvilleCoins.com and originally published here.

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Jan's first career was in the Dutch movie industry as a sound engineer. In 2014 he decided to switch jobs and started researching gold. At first he mainly wrote about the Chinese gold market, for which he gained global recognition. Subsequently, he also began analyzing other parts of the gold market, such as the COMEX futures market, the London Bullion Market, and the Turkish gold market. In addition he has expanded his field of research to macro economics. Currently, he writes about the international monetary system, central bank gold policies, the mechanics of the global gold market, the gold price and economics in general. When he’s not researching economics Jan likes to play various sports, read books, meditate, and watch documentaries.


The first use of gold as money occurred around 700 B.C., when Lydian merchants (western Turkey) produced the first coins
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