Gold has always meant different things to different people. A wedding ornament here. A safe box there. But the way people are buying, holding, and trading gold is changing, and the shift is bigger than most headlines suggest.
For most of gold's modern history, jewellery drove demand. That is no longer the case.
In 2025, total investment demand reached 2,175 tonnes, up 84% from 2024. Gold-backed ETFs added 801 tonnes over the year, the second-strongest result for ETF inflows on record. What is notable is that this happened while prices were already rising. That is not panic buying. That is considered positioning.
Global ETF holdings hit 4,025 tonnes by the end of 2025. Annual inflows in dollar terms reached $89 billion, also a record.
What drove investors this hard into gold?
Financialization is a jargon-heavy word for a simple idea. Gold is increasingly being used as a financial asset, not just a physical one. You do not need to hold a bar. You can buy an ETF, trade a futures contract on COMEX, or access OTC markets from your phone.
In September 2025, gold market trading volumes averaged $388 billion per day. OTC activity hit $191 billion per day, 50% above the 2024 average.
This matters practically. Financialised demand moves fast. It reacts to interest rate signals, news events, and macro data in ways that jewellery demand never could. The market is no longer just about who is buying rings in Mumbai or bars in Beijing.
There is a quieter change happening in India and China. Consumers are not just buying gold differently. They are relating to it differently.
Indian buyers are increasingly choosing to exchange old jewellery for new pieces, or pledging gold as collateral for loans, rather than selling outright. The gold stays in the system. But it is being used more like a financial tool than a family heirloom.
Analysts expect this trend to continue in both India and China, pushed along by weak equity markets, a slow property sector, and gold's price momentum over recent years.
For jewellers, this is a challenge. For investors, it is another sign of structural demand.
Historically, when gold prices spike, recycling follows. Sellers come out of the woodwork, old jewellery gets melted down, and supply rises. It is a reliable pattern.
Except it did not happen this time. Recycled gold grew only 3% to 1,404 tonnes in 2025, despite a 67% rise in the dollar price. In early 2025, recycling actually fell 1%.
A few reasons explain this:
Gold owners, it seems, are behaving a lot like equity investors in a bull run. Nobody wants to sell too early. That has supply implications the market will eventually have to reckon with.
If you are thinking about gold as part of your portfolio, a few things are worth keeping in mind:
Gold is not just a metal anymore. It trades like an asset class. ETF volumes, OTC activity, exchange programmes in India, and institutional positioning in Western markets are all pulling in the same direction.
Geopolitical pressure is unlikely to ease soon, which suggests investment demand will stay supported. Central banks are still buying. ETF inflows are running strong. The physical side of the market is adjusting, but it is the financial side that is doing most of the heavy lifting on price. Knowing that distinction can help you read gold news more clearly and make better decisions as a result.

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