The price of Gold surged 42.8% between September 2024 and September 2025, breaking past a record high of $3,650 per ounce and continuing its rally into October, where prices briefly exceeded $3,800.
The dramatic rise is driven by a weaker U.S. dollar, persistent inflationary pressures, and escalating geopolitical risks.
This means Nigeria’s 687,402 troy ounces of gold (approximately 21.38 metric tonnes) held as of the end of 2024 is now worth N3.7 trillion.
Central banks around the world are increasingly turning to gold as a strategic reserve asset, further fueling demand.
According to the World Gold Council, seven central banks added at least one tonne of gold to their reserves as of August 2025, while only two reported reductions.
Global central banks accelerate gold buying
Among the notable buyers of gold is Bank of Ghana, which added 2 tonnes in August, bringing its year-to-date total to 5 tonnes and overall reserves to 36 tonnes.
- People’s Bank of China purchased 2 tonnes, marking its tenth consecutive month of accumulation. China’s total gold holdings now exceed 2,300 tonnes, though they still represent just 7% of its international reserves.
- National Bank of Kazakhstan added 8 tonnes, its sixth straight month of buying, raising its reserves to 316 tonnes—32 tonnes higher than at the end of 2024.
Meanwhile, Russia and Indonesia were the only sellers, offloading 3 and 2 tonnes respectively. Russia’s reduction is believed to be linked to its coin-minting programme.
The U.S. Treasury’s gold holdings, already the largest in the world, have now surpassed $1 trillion in value, more than 90 times the amount recorded on its official balance sheet.
Nigeria’s gold reserves gain over N2.4 trillion in two years
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) held 687,402 troy ounces of gold (approximately 21.38 metric tonnes) as of the end of 2024, unchanged from the previous year. However, the value of these reserves has soared in line with global prices.
At current market rates, Nigeria’s gold holdings are now worth over N3.7 trillion, up from N2.77 trillion in 2024 and N1.28 trillion in 2023.
This N2.4 trillion gain over two years underscores gold’s resilience and reflects a broader international trend of central banks increasing gold allocations amid economic uncertainty.
Gold as a strategic hedge
Financial experts have emphasized gold’s enduring role as a safe-haven asset. “Buying more gold is always good. It remains one of the safest and most reliable stores of value,” said Chief Economist at the Development Bank of Nigeria, Professor Joseph Nnanna, at the recent Comercio Partners H2 Economic Outlook Forum in Lagos.
Nnanna also highlighted gold’s potential to drive industrial growth: “When central banks source gold domestically, it stimulates the entire mining value chain, from raw extraction to refining and jewellery manufacturing. That catalyzes industrialisation,” he explained.
