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PRIVACY
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Global gold demand remains 'robust' as investors flock to 'tax efficient' asset

The precious metal rallied over the first half of the year, recording a 26 per cent rise against the dollar and outperforming almost all other major asset classes

(Image: PA)

Worldwide appetite for gold demonstrates no signs of abating as investors and central banks persistently accumulate the safe haven commodity.

The precious metal surged during the opening six months of the year, achieving a 26 per cent gain versus the dollar and surpassing nearly all other principal asset categories, according to the latest analysis from the World Gold Council, as reported by .

The analysis credited rising demand for the commodity to continuing market turbulence, including "trade tensions, unpredictable US policy shifts and frequent geopolitical flashpoints."

Louise Street, senior markets analyst at the World Gold Council, said: "The robust investment activity we have seen in the first half of 2025 underscores gold's role as a hedge against economic and geopolitical risks.

"First half total investment was above 1,000t and the last time we saw a first half of that magnitude of investment was the first half of 2020. So it's quite a striking total for the first half of the year."

Central banks maintained their accumulation of reserves in the metal, though at a more measured rate, acquiring 166t.

The council's yearly central bank survey revealed 95 per cent of reserve managers anticipate worldwide central bank gold holdings will expand over the coming 12 months.

Ongoing appetite for bars, coins and ETFs

Overall bar and coin purchases climbed 11 per cent year on year, delivering the most robust opening half since 2013, with the Chinese marketplace particularly demonstrating elevated demand. Europe also registered robust expansion as gold investment doubled compared to the previous year.