Russia selling gold isn’t the story… how it uses it is the real story.

Many analyses have reduced the situation to one point:

A weaker ruble + rising deficits due to military spending = gold sales.

That sounds logical… but it’s superficial.

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Let’s look at the full picture:

As of April 2026, Russia still holds over 74 million ounces of gold

(around 2,300 tons).

This stockpile wasn’t built in a year or two…but over more than 20 years…

when gold prices were much lower than they are today.

At the same time:

Russia is the second-largest gold producer in the world after China,

with annual production of about 300 tons.

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What does that mean?

Simply put:

Selling 22 tons (around 700,000 ounces) is not a “strategic shift”

but just a small move within a large, carefully managed reserve.

So… what’s actually happening?

When a country faces:

Currency pressure

Rising fiscal deficits

Restrictions on access to foreign reserves

Gold shifts from being a “reserve asset” to “usable liquidity.”

Not theoretical value.

Not paper assets.

But… real liquidity outside the system.

And here’s the key signal:

Russia isn’t abandoning gold.

It’s proving why it accumulated it over two decades.

In a world where financial assets are conditional

and global systems can be restricted…

Gold returns to its original role:

A sovereign asset… that works when everything else fails.

The real question:

How many countries today truly hold “unconditional liquidity”?

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