Abstract:Gold's structural bull case strengthens as central banks continue record purchases to diversify reserves, coinciding with signs that global mining production is reaching a long-term plateau.

While short-term price action in XAU/USD remains tethered to Federal Reserve rate expectations, a deeper structural shift is underpinning the yellow metal's long-term bullish thesis.
Data from the World Gold Council highlights a persistent trend: Global Central Banks are relentlessly accumulating bullion. Despite a slight dip in momentum, net purchases reached 297 tons in 2025 (through November), driven largely by emerging market heavyweights including China, Poland, and Turkey.
This is not a speculative trade but a strategic divorce from US Dollar hegemony. As US fiscal deficits widen—eroding the greenback's purchasing power by an estimated 5% annually—sovereign managers are prioritizing hard assets over Treasury securities.
On the supply side, the “Peak Gold” narrative is gaining traction. Global production hovered around 3,645 tons in 2024, a marginal increase that suggests the easy-to-access reserves have been exhausted.
Analysts note that mining output responds to price signals with a significant lag—often up to six years. With few major discoveries and rising extraction costs, supply is unlikely to react elastically to higher prices.
For Forex and Commodities traders, this supply-demand imbalance offers a floor for Gold prices during dollar corrections. Even as the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets rises with yields, the physical bid from sovereigns creates a unique structural support that sets this cycle apart from historical norms.