We need a Dad Jokes thread? 
China seems to be buying again.
often wonder about the stories of central banks all over the world buying up huge tranches of gold, if its true then maybe that could account for gold's steady climb for the last few years?
... For most of 2024 CB buying had declined and I'd say it was the retail and institutional market that drove prices higher, ...
CB buying (India, China, etc.) has been strong in 2024:
https://x.com/KrishanGopaul/status/1854920783644017182
https://www.moneymetals.com/news/20...just-secretly-bought-60-tonnes-of-gold-003648
Retail isn't really driving this bus:
https://www.gold.org/goldhub/research/etf-flows
and FWIW:
https://gata.org/node/23529
The central banks know what's coming and they cant keep the turd afloat forever.
Its probably just a coincidence.
They aren't buying enough to raise any alarms anyway. Just tiny amounts here and there.
They've been net buyers the last 14 years and own 17 percent of the gold on Earth.
It almost does seem false haha.
Looks good so far, hopefully Friday shows a bad job market.dxy might have made it’s high last night![]()
The world’s central banks continued to drive demand for gold in November, with the lion’s share of purchases once again being made by emerging markets, according to Krishan Gopaul, Senior Analyst, EMEA at the World Gold Council.
“November represented another solid month of gold buying as central banks collectively added a net 53t to global official holdings based on available reported data,” Gopaul said. ...
While gold prices enjoyed a strong and steady climb in 2024, physical gold demand, as reflected in ETF flows, was much more uneven, as investors sought to get ahead of big price moves during some periods, and took advantage of record-high prices to liquidate holdings at other times.
Among the major regions, data from the World Gold Council (WGC) showed ETF demand from Asian investors was the most steady, with the overwhelming majority of weekly flows reports showing net gains in the region as China's faltering currency and collapsing property market combined to drive strong safe-haven appeal for the yellow metal. By contrast, European and North American ETF demand reflected a more arbitrary and opportunistic attitude as OECD investors were happy to jump on and off the gold price roller coaster depending on how interest rates, equities, and precious metals prices were performing on a week-to-week basis.
...