Uzbekistan stopped selling gold abroad in October, and six months later the country just dumped $1.5 billion of it onto global markets in a single month.
The National Statistics Committee reported the numbers Tuesday, with almost all of the year-to-date exports landing in April. That means one of the world's biggest gold producers just turned the tap back on at full pressure.
A Six-Month Pause, Then A Wave
From October 2025 through March 2026, Uzbekistan shipped no gold overseas - none at all - while it sat on the metal as prices kept climbing.
Then April hit, and the freeze ended with the $1.5 billion in non-monetary gold sales concentrated almost entirely in one month.
For context on what Uzbekistan typically does: in 2025 the country sold $9.9 billion of gold abroad, which was 29.3% of total exports and an all-time record. Gold is the country's economy in a way few investors outside Central Asia track.
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Why The Freeze, Why The Sell
Uzbekistan stockpiled gold during the pause as prices kept setting records.
The country's international reserves hit $70 billion in January 2026 with 86% of that in gold, which is $27.1 billion more than a year earlier.
When a producer that big sits on its inventory and prices keep rising, every month is a bigger paper gain - so selling now means locking some of it in.
The Navoi Mining and Metallurgical Combine, the country's flagship producer and the fourth-largest in the world, posted $1.5 billion in net profit in just the first half of 2025 on $4.7 billion in revenue.
What It Means For The Gold Market
A $1.5 billion sale in a single month from one country is a real number, even in a global gold market that runs hot right now.
Whether more of Uzbekistan's stockpile follows it onto the market is the open question. If this is the start of a wider sell-down, that's new supply hitting at a moment when central banks elsewhere are still buying.
What To Watch
The May export data is the next tell. If it matches or exceeds April, Uzbekistan is back as a steady seller - and gold's supply picture just changed.
If it drops back toward zero, April was a one-off cash-in.
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