Gold Demand Hits Q2 Record High, Driven by Central Bank Purchases, World Gold Council Reports


Gold Demand Hits Q2 Record High, Driven by Central Bank Purchases, World Gold Council Reports

  news.bitcoin.com 31 July 2024 04:41, UTC

The World Gold Council’s Q2 2024 report highlights a year-on-year increase in gold demand, marking the highest second-quarter demand since 2000. This surge is fueled by central bank purchases and OTC investments, with central bank gold buying up by 6% and technology sector demand rising by 11%.

Q2 2024 Sees Record Gold Demand

The World Gold Council’s latest report, published on July 30, highlights Q2 2024 trends, showing the highest second-quarter gold demand since records began in 2000.

While noting that “Gold demand excluding OTC in Q2 was down 6% y/y to 929t as a sharp decline in jewelry consumption outweighed mild gains in all other sectors,” the report notes that “adding in OTC investment to total gold demand yields a 4% y/y increase to 1,258t – the highest Q2 in our data series back to 2000.”

The report adds:

Central bank net gold buying was 6% higher y/y at 184t, driven by the need for portfolio protection and diversification.

Jewelry demand fell 19% year-on-year to a four-year low of 391 tonnes, largely due to record-high gold prices, which averaged $2,338 per ounce in Q2 and peaked at $2,427 per ounce in May.

The World Gold Council further detailed that “Total gold supply grew by 4% y/y to 1,258t. Mine production of 929t was a record for a second quarter. Recycling supply was the highest for a second quarter since 2012, responding to the rising gold price.”

The report also notes a 7-tonne decline in global gold exchange-traded fund (ETF) holdings in Q2 and a 5% decrease in retail bar and coin investment to 261 tonnes, primarily due to weak demand from Western markets. The report further highlights:

Gold used in technology jumped 11% y/y, as the AI trend continued to drive demand in the sector.

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