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The Dollar Isn't Collapsing. But Central Banks Are Voting With Their Gold.

Published May 2, 2026
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Summary:
  • Gold traded above $4,000 per ounce in late 2025, up roughly 50% year-to-date per VanEck.
  • Amundi forecasts gold could reach $5,000 per ounce by 2028, with VanEck projecting a similar trajectory by 2030.
  • Per VanEck, some investment professionals view a 5-10% gold allocation as a reasonable way to add diversification to a balanced portfolio.

You do not need to bet on dollar collapse to take this seriously.

The de-dollarization story is a slow, structural shift, with central banks diversifying, gold back in favor, and a handful of practical moves that fit the trend without requiring a doomsday view.

What The Asset Managers Are Saying

VanEck's November 2025 report on gold is direct, calling gold "a structural necessity in diversified portfolios" and saying it has moved from cyclical safe haven to long-term core holding.

Their numbers tell the story: gold up 50% year-to-date in 2025, gold miners up over 120%, and average all-in sustaining costs around $1,600 per ounce, which means producers are running at record margins with gold above $4,000.

VanEck's 2030 price target is $5,000 per ounce, and Amundi's research center lands in a similar place, with a 2028 target of $5,000 in its October 2025 "Gold Beyond Records" report.

Amundi names the move "the beginning of a gradual transition from a US-centric international monetary system to a more multipolar one," and both firms point to the same drivers: central bank diversification, geopolitical risk, sovereign debt concerns, and Western investor return after years of gold ETF outflows.

Three Practical Moves That Fit The Trend

A few moves match the data without requiring a dollar-collapse thesis:

  • A persistent gold allocation. VanEck flags 5-10% as a defensible range cited by some investment professionals, while Amundi notes the typical investor still holds about 2% in gold, leaving room to grow.
  • Exposure to non-US developed and emerging markets. A multipolar reserve order means more capital flowing outside the dollar, and US investors with home bias are heavily concentrated in dollar-denominated assets by default, which is why a 20-30% allocation to international stocks is the textbook adjustment.
  • Shorter duration on long-dated US Treasuries. If foreign demand for Treasuries weakens over the next decade, long-dated yields could rise and bond prices could fall, while shorter maturities cut that risk.

None of these are panic moves, just slow, structural responses to a slow, structural shift.

Why The Signal Is Real

In the World Gold Council survey of central banks, the direction was nearly unanimous, with no central bank expecting its gold holdings to fall over the following five years (per past surveys cited in Amundi's analysis).

That is the cleanest data in this entire conversation, since reserve managers are not retail traders and they run multi-decade horizons. When they vote with their gold, they are voting on what they trust to hold value when the next crisis hits.

Per Amundi, central bank gold demand accounts for roughly 20% of total annual gold demand right now, up from about 10% in the 2010s. The biggest 2024 buyers - Poland (90 tonnes), Turkey (75 tonnes), India (73 tonnes), and China (44 tonnes) - are the same emerging-market central banks that have driven the de-dollarization conversation in the first place.

The dollar is not going anywhere fast, but its monopoly already is.

Worth Noting

A 5% gold allocation in a 60-40 portfolio would not have prevented every drawdown of the past decade, but it would have helped at every major risk event - which is what diversification does for a living.

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