Central Bank Gold Buying Slowed in August

Higher gold prices have put a damper on central bank gold buying, but the World Gold Council still categorized August purchases as “firm.”

Globally, central banks added 10 tonnes of gold to their reserves in August.

The slowdown in buying was evident in the second quarter. Central banks globally added 166 tonnes of gold to their reserves in Q2. That was a 33 percent quarter-on-quarter decline and the lowest quarterly demand since Q2 2022.

However, gold buying was still 41 percent above the quarterly average that was typical between 2010 and 2021.

The World Gold Council notes that while central banks tend to make reserve decisions strategically, they are not totally insensitive to prices.

In August, banks made smaller purchases, and several regular buyers were conspicuously absent.