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China's central banks increases gold reserves in February for the fourth consecutive month

China's reserves of gold rose to 73.61 fine troy-ounces by the end February, up from 73.45 at the end January. The central bank continued buying the precious metals for the fourth consecutive month.

China's gold reserves increased to $208.64 billion by the end last month from $206.53 at the end January, according to data released on Friday.

The PBOC purchases are a major factor in the price of gold. Therefore, if it continues to buy gold in February, this could further strengthen gold's value, said Frank Watson.

Gold reached a new record on the 24th of February, driven by fears about U.S. tariffs on imports and their possible impact on global growth and inflation. Geopolitical uncertainties also contributed to this. Bullion prices rose 27% in 2024. This is the highest in 14 years.

Washington has added 20 percent to existing tariffs on Chinese products. The latest increment of 10 points was implemented on Tuesday and prompted Beijing's response.

China released more fiscal stimulus Wednesday, promising to increase efforts to support consumer spending and cushion the impact from an escalating U.S. trade war. Meanwhile, China's State Planner said that the country would

Accelerate the annual stockpiling

Strategic commodities

According to the World Gold Council, global central banks are a major source for gold demand. They bought over 1,000 metric tonnes of the metal in 2024, the third consecutive year, and they will continue to be active buyers of the metal in 2025.

Watson stated that central banks were relatively insensitive to price when it comes to gold, and they tend to purchase as part of a reorganization of their reserves.

The PBOC, and other central banks have been a major factor in gold's strong price performance during the past two years. Other factors such as inflation, interest rate, geopolitical issues and investor interest will continue to influence the gold price.

The PBOC paused its gold purchases for six months in 2024 after an 18-month gold-buying spree. They resumed the gold-buying spree again in November. Reporting by Qiaoyi Li in Beijing, Yukun Zhu and Ryan Woo from London and Polina Devitt in Beijing; Editing and production by David Goodman & Janane Venkatraman

(source: Reuters)