
New Gold-ETF Data: Record Inflows Fuel Metal’s Best Year Since 1979
Gold closed out 2025 in runaway mode, notching fresh all-time highs on 53 trading days and sprinting to an intraday peak of $4,514 per ounce on the year’s final Friday. The blistering rally ignited a historic rush into physically backed exchange-traded funds (ETFs), which absorbed a record $89 billion and more than doubled global assets under management to an unprecedented $559 billion. Seven straight months of inflows capped the metal’s strongest annual performance since 1979, underscoring how nervous capital is seeking shelter from policy missteps, geopolitical flare-ups, and an increasingly frothy equity market.
Source: World Gold Council
North American investors led the charge, accounting for $51 billion—about 57 percent—of total ETF inflows. Assets and tonnage for the region’s funds finished the year at all-time highs, with flagship vehicles such as SPDR Gold Shares raking in $3.6 billion in December alone. Asian demand was nearly as eye-catching: regional products gathered $25 billion, a larger haul than all net buying from 2007 through 2024 combined, while Indian funds strung together eight consecutive months of additions. Even Europe, after two years of redemptions, reversed course with a $12 billion splash led by the United Kingdom and Switzerland.
The Federal Reserve’s December “hawkish” quarter-point rate cut—paired with a quiet restart of Treasury bill purchases—only hardened bullion’s allure. While officials framed the move as prudent fine-tuning, markets saw stealth easing and a precursor to deeper liquidity injections once a new Fed Chair takes the helm in early 2026. Such policy zigzags have long been kryptonite for savers, inflating asset bubbles and eroding purchasing power. It is little wonder that many portfolio managers are reaching for the one asset Washington cannot print.…