Gold overtakes U.S. Treasuries as the largest foreign reserve asset (economictimes.indiatimes.com)

by lxm 250 comments 267 points
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250 comments

[−] aloha2436 42d ago
America was in practice running an empire that collected tribute from the rest of planet earth in exchange for entries in a database denominated in a currency they controlled and that was accepted everywhere. Really the only way it could go wrong is putting it under the control of someone who doesn't understand the kayfabe...
[−] rapind 42d ago

> someone too stupid to understand

That's only true if he's actually "your guy". There's an alternative where it's not stupidity that I think more people should be mulling over.

[−] skippyboxedhero 41d ago
Not aware of what happened in the 70s then with Bretton Woods? Not aware of what happened pre-08? It has gone wrong multiple times before just for the US and the US exporting inflation is not good for either the US or the rest of the world.

As with NATO, I am not sure what the argument is...yes, other countries should take more of a role in their own defence...yes, other countries should take more of a role in their own economic governance/financial stability.

On this topic specifically though, I will also point out that whatever the faults of the US, no-one had a problem when Germany was exporting crippling levels of deflation (this is one of the main issues that wasn't solved after WW2 despite being identified by Keynes: deficit countries will be told they need to rebalance, but not surplus countries). Germany have solved that problem with catastrophically bad foreign policy destroying their economy (once again) but before this, they were the main source of global financial instability (China, to their credit, is probably one of the only countries ever to rebalance from surplus to deficit country...Germany has done this multiple times over the years and has blamed other countries every time).

Other countries using gold instead of US debt is good for both the US and those countries. Most of the "increase" has been due to gold rising in value and, fundamentally, it cannot solve the problem because the price cannot rise as much as it needs to but it should be part of a mix with SDRs and other securities.

[−] epolanski 41d ago
US will have to refinance $ 10T of debt next year. That's a gargantuan amount of money and I see no scenario in which this won't have quite higher yields than the expiring one, remnant of the low rate decade.

With foreigners and hedge funds less prone to buy US debt right now it's going to be quite interesting to see what will happen.

[−] bijowo1676 42d ago
elections have consequences...
[−] potamic 42d ago
Dated Jan 9. When the headlines is in present tense, it is kinda misleading to post as-is at a later time.
[−] icegreentea2 42d ago
The events of the last year certainly have a role to play, but the overall effect is just the result of trendlines that have been in play for quite a while.

Here's a world gold council (i know...) review/survey of central banks gold holdings from mid 2025 (https://www.gold.org/goldhub/research/central-bank-gold-rese...). It notes that gold purchases (by mass) have been elevated going back to ~2023.

Gold prices have also been on an upward trajectory ever since 2023 (https://goldprice.org/gold-price-history.html)

Whatever is happening now is bigger than actions over the last year.

[−] consumer451 42d ago
The fact that this all happened by choice is really something.

It's like witnessing a self-decapitation.

[−] znnajdla 41d ago
For the first time in history we are seeing multiple signals of USD losing its #1 position to EUR, all within the last year :

1. Euro-denominated interest rate derivatives (IRD) overtook US dollar-denominated contracts in the over-the-counter (OTC) market for the first time in history and the scale of the crossover is staggering.

2. EUR Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER) which measures actual purchasing power (not nominal price) is going in the opposite direction of USD real purchasing power (RTWEXBGS). 2025/2026 is the largest divergence in history: 10 percentage points in a year.

3. US treasuries is no longer a number 1 foreign reserve asset. EUR reserves grew 2.5x faster than USD reserves when measured in its own absolute terms.

Unlike the Eurozone which maintains a fiscally responsible budget with reasonable debt and a trade surplus, there is simply no foreseeable fix to the problem of ballooning US debt and trade deficits. Nothing can fix the US budget mess.

Anyone who is paying attention to the numbers would certainly have more confidence in EUR over USD.

[−] richardatlarge 41d ago
Silver has gone up more by percentage since 47, as a side note
[−] edweis 42d ago
Is there a place where we can find the complete USA investment portfolio?
[−] tsoukase 41d ago
Since a lot of time the US economy and finance are under stress. Not panic but stress. And this makes the leaders stressful too, so they take defensive and hostile actions, most lately by the Trump's government. The world will neither wait nor allow the US to remain leader, especially with non standard ways. The world changes to a tri-pole with satellite nodes. Gold price is just a variable in the system and is dependent of the global state.
[−] pkilgore 41d ago
Months old article.
[−] therobots927 42d ago
America really is in for a wake up call.
[−] daft_pink 41d ago
It’s obvious that printing money is the best way out of the USAs debt problem. Gold still sucks though.
[−] yalogin 42d ago
I am actually convinced that the last year started the descent of the U.S. as the world’s super power. No wonder U.S. treasuries lost trust. It’s only going to get worse. It doesn’t matter what some billionaires do/get from their ability to manipulate some powers be. The rest of the investment community understands that free markets are strengthened by rule of law and adherence to the law and deploying a self styled socialistic distribution of economic capital is not signaling strength but weakness to the world.
[−] mt18 41d ago
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[−] nmbrskeptix 42d ago
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[−] fleroviumna 41d ago
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[−] hackernews682 42d ago
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[−] 9dev 41d ago
Are you tired of winning yet?
[−] justsomedev2 42d ago
Cant wait for US to go bankrupt
[−] Animats 42d ago
Wow. This reflects the price of gold going up. A lot.
[−] johng 42d ago
If the value of gold goes up, doesn't this essentially help the US anyway? I believe our gold reservers are twice that of the closest country?

Source: https://tradingeconomics.com/country-list/gold-reserves