Gold Dethrones the Dollar: The New King of Global Reserve Assets Emerges
The tectonic plates of global finance are shifting. Forget the old guard—a silent revolution in reserve holdings is rewriting the rules of monetary power.
The Great Unpegging
Central banks aren't just diversifying anymore; they're executing a strategic pivot. Gold's timeless allure—zero counterparty risk, physical sovereignty—is cutting through the noise of fiat promises and digital volatility. It's not a hedge; it's a statement.
Bypassing the Old System
This move isn't about minor portfolio adjustments. It's a direct challenge to dollar hegemony, fueled by geopolitical fractures and a growing distrust in debt-backed currencies. Nations are opting for the asset that can't be printed or sanctioned—a tangible anchor in an increasingly abstract financial sea.
The New Reserve Reality
The data tells a stark story. Accumulation rates have shattered multi-decade records. Allocations are being recalibrated not by the quarter, but for the coming century. The message from vaults worldwide is clear: when confidence erodes, gravity pulls towards gold.
So, has the dollar been replaced? Officially, maybe not. Functionally, the race is on. In the high-stakes game of reserve assets, gold is no longer just a safe haven—it's the contender taking the crown. After all, in finance, the ultimate vote of confidence is the one you can literally hold in your hand. The rest is just ledger entries and promises—and we've seen how those turn out.
However, official IMF data shows this has not happened yet – though the gap is clearly narrowing.
According to the IMF’s COFER (Currency Composition of Official Foreign Exchange Reserve) data for Q3 2025, the US dollars remain the dominant global reserve currency.

Total global FX reserve: ~$13 trillion
US dollar share: ~56.9%
Dollars value in reserves: ~$7.4 trillion
Gold, meanwhile, is not included in COFER because it is tracked separately from foreign exchange reserves.
Central banks collectively hold about 36,000–36,400 tonnes of the asset.
At current prices (~$4,400–$4,460/oz):
Estimated value of global gold-reserves: ~$5.1–$5.2 trillion
The precious metal has overtaken the euro as the second-largest gloabal reserve asset by value
But it still trails the USD, which remains larger by over $2 trillion
So the claim that gold has already surpassed the dollar is not correct in current context, especially until the release of the latest COPER report in April/May 2026.
But, why is gold overtaking dollar narratives surging potentially in the markets? Is the reason hidden in Gold’s demand or Dollar’s performance?
Why People Think Gold Could Overtake the Dollars Soon
Even though the confirmation hasn’t released by any official organisation, speculation is intense, and for clear reason it’s not specific toward any asset, but both are contributing to the surging narratives equally:
The physical asset is rising rapidly. It already passed the euro in mid-2025, becoming the second-largest reserve asset overall, even though it is not a currency.

Currently trading at $4,467.65 (+0.47%) per ounce, extending gains for a third straight session. On a broader scale, the metal has surged 6.6% over the past month and an impressive 68.6% year-on-year. Its rally underscores its growing appeal as a safe-haven asset mainly due to:
Heavy central bank buying (over 1000 tonnes per year recently)
Political and Economical tensions
Inflation fears
Reduced trust in long-term fiat stability
Gold’s reserve “share” is rising mostly because its price is exploding, not because countries are selling dollars aggressively.
The dollar’s reserve dominance has fallen from ~71% in 2000 to 57% in recent reports. It coincides with the USD’s long term value downfall. Currently the value index has steadied around 98.4, down 0.14%, where it declined 9.51% on yearly basis.

Importantly:
There is no evidence of rapid de-dollarization
Recent decline is mainly driven by diversification into euro, yen, and other currencies, not panic selling.
Still, if gold prices continue rising while FX reserves grow slowly, it could surpass USD by value in future reports.
Where Cryptocurrency Fits Into This Shift
Alongside the hard metals, digital assets are quietly entering national balance sheets, though outside traditional IMF reserve frameworks. Some governments now treat Bitcoin like “digital gold”, holding it in treasuries rather than central bank FX reserves.
Some nations with highest crypto portfolio include:
United States: Around 200k BTC from seizure, formalized as a strategic reserve
Bhutan: BTC accumulated via state-backed mining
EI Salvador: Ongoing treasury purchases
China & UK: Large seizure-based holdings

Globally, Governments hold more than 640,000 BTC, worth around $60 billion. Comparative to physical product's reserves, it surely holds a tiny share, but symbolically important and rapidly growing.
While most central banks reject crypto due to volatility, institutions and sovereign funds are experimenting, especially to deal with inflations.
The Coming Phase Designed by Present
The USD is still king of global reserves, while the yellow metal is rising fast, driven by price gains and central bank demand. Crypto is emerging as a strategic hedge for a small but growing number of countries.
For now, Gold has not surpassed the dollar, but if current trends continue, future IMF reports could show a historic shift.
This analysis is based on publicly available IMF and market data and does not represent investment advice.