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By banning paper gold, China forces its citizens' investment appetite into physical gold. This creates a massive, decentralized buying force that drains physical reserves from Western vaults, undermining their ability to run a fractional reserve paper market.

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By creating a gold exchange based on physical delivery, China aims to become the global price-setter for gold. This establishes a parallel financial system, allowing international trade to be settled in yuan anchored to gold and directly challenging the dollar's dominance.

In a historic shift, central banks are divesting from US debt and buying physical gold at a record pace. This signals a deep erosion of trust in the US dollar as the primary reserve asset, favoring the tangible security of gold.

Raghuram Rajan explains that central banks are increasing gold reserves not just for diversification, but as a direct response to geopolitical risks like the seizure of Russian assets. This 'weaponization of payments' erodes trust in holding reserves in foreign currencies, making physically controlled gold more attractive as a neutral asset.

The US freezing Russian assets and cutting SWIFT access during the Ukraine war demonstrated the risks of relying on the dollar. This prompted countries like China to accelerate their diversification into gold, viewing it as a geopolitically neutral asset to reduce their vulnerability to US foreign policy and sanctions.

Western finance treats assets as abstract instruments, creating huge leverage like the 356 paper claims per physical ounce of silver. China's control of the physical supply reveals this system is incredibly fragile and can collapse under real-world stress, serving as a warning for all paper-based markets.

Similar to banking, the gold market creates multiple "paper" claims for a single physical unit of gold. This inflates the perceived supply, artificially suppressing the price, and makes the system vulnerable to a "bank run" if holders demand physical delivery.

China is the world's largest gold producer and importer and exports none of it, likely holding ten times more than officially stated. A sudden declaration of its true reserves could function as a 'financial declaration of war,' severely threatening the US dollar's global standing.

Extreme premiums on Chinese silver funds, reminiscent of the Grayscale Bitcoin premium in 2020, indicate that the marginal buyer driving the metals rally is Chinese investors seeking scarce assets outside their domestic market. This geopolitical flow is a critical, under-discussed factor.

China is eliminating speculative paper gold markets for its citizens. While officially protecting investors from volatility, the strategic goal is to remove the paper market's price suppression and discover gold's true, potentially much higher, value.

The West's financial system relies on physical gold reserves to underpin its vast paper trading markets. By physically removing gold bars, China reduces the base asset available for this fractional reserve game, directly weakening a key pillar of Western financial power.