Gold prices have recovered to $5,161 per ounce after January’s dramatic crash – and the epicenter of the rebound points squarely at China.
But this time, the story is bigger than speculation. Beijing is making a coordinated push to reshape the global gold market from the ground up. Because why not? They’ve already mastered the art of making us question our life choices.
The Hainan Arbitrage
Hainan’s new zero-tariff regime was designed to showcase China’s openness to foreign imports. The early numbers suggest it’s working – at least on the surface. Unless the surface is a mirage fueled by gold-hungry shoppers and a side of government subsidies.
Hainan launched island-wide customs-free operations on Dec. 18. The nine-day Spring Festival holiday was the first major test. Offshore duty-free sales hit 2.72 billion yuan ($390.8 million), up 30.8% year-on-year, with 325,000 shoppers, according to Haikou Customs data reported by the Moodie Davitt Report on Feb. 24. The momentum had been building since December. January sales reached 4.86 billion yuan ($693.5 million), up 46.8% year-on-year, per Xinhua. Presumably, someone’s calculating this while sipping jasmine tea and eyeing a gold-plated calculator.
Gold jewelry remained a top draw during the holiday. China Daily reported on Feb. 23 that zodiac-inspired pieces and investment-grade bullion flew off shelves even as prices vaulted back above 1,500 yuan per gram. The Moodie Davitt Report confirmed jewellery and watches ranked among the top-selling categories at CDF Sanya, the island’s flagship duty-free complex. Let’s not pretend this isn’t just everyone hedging against inflation and their ex’s next move.
The Global Times reported on Feb. 25 that leading brands Laopu Gold and Chow Tai Fook launched aggressive promotional campaigns during the holiday, including gram-based discounts and fee waivers for craftsmanship. A Chow Tai Fook salesperson in Beijing confirmed the increased foot traffic and purchases. Presumably, they’re now the most popular people in China, aside from whoever handles the gold vault keys.
The price advantage in Hainan remains significant. Yicai Global reported in January that Chow Tai Fook gold costs roughly 1,250 yuan per gram in Hainan versus 1,430 yuan on the mainland. A 40-gram bracelet can save buyers 13,000 to 14,000 yuan with government subsidies factored in. Because nothing says “economic stability” like turning a duty-free island into a gold-fueled paradise for the middle class.
The pattern suggests something deeper about China’s consumer economy. Given a tax break, the middle class isn’t spending on luxury – it’s hedging with gold. Turns out, when you give the middle class a break, they don’t go wild on designer handbags-they go wild on gold. Who knew?
Hong Kong’s Bid for Global Bullion Dominance
While retail buyers flock to Hainan, Beijing is playing a far larger game. Hong Kong’s Undersecretary for Financial Services Joseph Chan announced at the Year of the Horse’s first gold trading session that the government will make a “full push” to transform the city into a regional gold storage and trading hub. Because why let a few protests and identity crises derail a perfectly good gold empire?
The plan is ambitious: expand Hong Kong’s gold storage capacity to over 2,000 metric tonnes within three years, launch a fully state-owned gold clearing system with trial operations later this year, and deepen alignment between the Shanghai Gold Exchange and Hong Kong’s market. Hong Kong, the city that can’t even agree on a subway route, is now trying to become the Switzerland of gold. Spoiler: it’s not Switzerland.
The objective is explicit – expanding China’s market share and influence over international gold pricing. Western financial centers have historically controlled that domain. But hey, nothing says “trust us” like handing over your gold to a city that once thought a “freeport” was just a fancy way to say “no one knows what’s happening.”
The initiative goes beyond domestic ambitions. Several Asian nations have expressed interest in storing sovereign gold with the SGE as it expands offshore vaults. Cambodia’s central bank is expected to be among the first to use SGE offshore vaults. It may store part of its 54 tonnes of gold reserves in Shenzhen’s bonded zone. Because nothing says “strategic partnership” like letting China guard your gold while you sip lukewarm coffee and hope for the best.
The Structural Bid Beneath the Speculation
January’s blowout – gold down 9%, silver crashing 26% in a single day – exposed the speculative froth. Leveraged retail traders were wiped out, gold ETFs saw nearly $1 billion in single-day outflows, and exchanges hiked margin requirements. All while the rest of us were too busy crying into our avocado toast to notice.
Yet physical gold demand in China barely flinched. Shanghai Gold Exchange premiums widened to $30-32 per ounce above London spot even as global prices cratered. Bank deposit rates have been crushed by monetary easing, the property market offers no refuge, and gold remains the most compelling store of value for households with few other options. Because of course it does. Why trust a bank when you can trust a 40-gram bracelet?
With gold currently accounting for just 1% of Chinese household assets – compared to a projected 5% in the near term – the structural bid from the world’s largest gold consumer is far from over. And now, Beijing isn’t just buying gold. It’s building the infrastructure to price it. Because nothing says “endgame” like turning gold into a geopolitical chess piece while the rest of us argue about which streaming service has the best rom-coms.
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2026-02-25 04:52