Gold Demand Splits in Two: Bullion Buys Surge 46.4% as Jewelry Plunges 37.1%

The “Dual Extremes” of Gold Consumption: Structural Divergence Reveals a Paradigm Shift in Household Asset Allocation
In Q1 2024, China’s gold consumption data exhibited a rare “K-shaped divergence”: national gold consumption rose modestly by 4.41% year-on-year—superficially stable, yet internally undergoing dramatic structural realignment. Bar and coin purchases surged 46.4% YoY, while gold jewelry consumption plunged 37.1% YoY—a near-collapse. More significantly, bars and coins accounted for 66.6% of total gold consumption, the highest share ever recorded since statistics began. This seemingly paradoxical combination is no short-term fluctuation; rather, it signals a systemic shift in household wealth management logic: gold is rapidly transforming from a “decorative consumer good” into a “non-fiat-currency substitute,” its core function undergoing a quiet yet profound redefinition.
Escalating Geopolitical Intensity and Eroding Monetary Trust: The Dual Pressures Driving a Rediscovery of Physical Gold
The root cause of this structural divergence lies in a qualitative transformation of the macro environment. Geopolitical risk has entered a phase of high intensity and density: Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has publicly declared that its missiles and drones “have locked onto U.S. targets and hostile warships in the region,” warning of “forceful retaliation” against any infringement upon Iranian merchant vessels. Iranian Foreign Ministry officials have even labeled U.S. naval operations in the Strait of Hormuz as “piratical acts,” stressing the need to prevent militarized abuse. Meanwhile, the Russia-Ukraine conflict remains mired in stalemate: although President Putin has stated he does not oppose meeting with President Zelenskyy, he insists any negotiations must culminate in a “final agreement”—a peace path still strewn with thorns. This multi-front, highly uncertain geopolitical volatility directly undermines global financial system stability expectations.
Against this backdrop, RMB-denominated assets have exhibited markedly heightened volatility. In Q1 2024, major A-share indices saw widened trading ranges; the yield on 10-year Chinese government bonds fluctuated across a broader band; and real estate–related asset prices remain range-bound at depressed levels. As the “certainty premium” of traditional financial assets is persistently eroded, households’ innate risk-aversion instinct naturally pivots toward assets with greater physical durability and lower reliance on sovereign credit. Bars and coins—immediately possessable, counterparty-risk-free, and globally recognized stores of value—have seen their role as “non-fiat-currency substitutes” dramatically reinforced. Data shows surging foot traffic at commercial banks’ physical-gold sales counters in Q1, with access volumes to precious-metals sections on multiple bank apps doubling month-on-month—evidence of a behavioral shift from “passive holding” to “active accumulation.”
Entrenched High Interest Rates: A Fundamental Reversal in Gold’s Opportunity-Cost Logic
Another critical variable is the interest-rate environment. Although market consensus remains divided on the timing of Federal Reserve rate cuts, the China-U.S. interest-rate differential remains wide, and both China’s one-year deposit rates and 10-year government bond yields stand near multi-year highs. Traditionally, high interest rates raise the opportunity cost of holding interest-free gold, dampening investment demand. Yet this current divergence signals a fundamental restructuring of that classic logic: when households’ concerns over long-term inflation trends, exchange-rate stability, and overall asset safety outweigh their sensitivity to short-term interest losses, the “safety premium” begins to eclipse the “interest discount.” In other words, gold is no longer about “forgoing interest to preserve value”; it is now about “paying an interest cost to purchase ultimate security.” This explains why investment-oriented gold consumption has surged—even amid unchanged high interest rates—reflecting a cross-cycle transfer of risk-pricing authority.
Three Tangible Impacts on the Financial Ecosystem
This deep-seated shift is rapidly transmitting to the financial infrastructure level, triggering cascading effects:
First, banks’ precious-metals businesses face strategic restructuring. The legacy light-asset model—relying primarily on sales commissions and bid-ask spreads—is becoming unsustainable. Customers now demand professional asset-allocation advice, secure and convenient physical delivery, and structured products linked to gold. Several joint-stock banks have piloted “gold dollar-cost averaging + insurance trust” packages, integrating physical gold into family wealth succession frameworks—marking a decisive pivot from transaction-driven to allocation-driven business models.
Second, the liquidity structure of gold ETFs is shifting quietly. Although ETF assets under management continue expanding, on-exchange trading activity and institutional subscription/redemption rhythms are diverging. In Q1, gold ETFs’ average daily trading volume grew only 12.3% YoY—significantly slower than the 28.7% YoY growth in fund shares—indicating that new inflows are predominantly long-term holdings, not tactical trades. This necessitates market makers to adjust quoting strategies and prompts regulators to consider optimizing ETF physical creation/redemption mechanisms to strengthen their anchoring to the physical gold market.
Third, valuation models for gold mining equities urgently require updating. Conventional DCF models overemphasize short-term gold-price fluctuations and cost control, overlooking the strategic value inherent in “physical gold reserves.” As household allocation demand translates into sustained, inflexible physical procurement, miners’ “proven reserve volumes” and “refining-and-delivery capacity” are emerging as new core competitiveness metrics. Markets are assigning higher valuation premiums to leading miners possessing proprietary refineries and direct distribution channels to bank branches—a reflection of their evolving identity from “commodity producers” to “suppliers of security assets.”
Conclusion: Reading the Evolutionary Scale of Wealth Civilization Through Consumption Data
The explosive rise in bar-and-coin purchases and the sharp decline in gold jewelry consumption reflect more than a simple category-level substitution—they represent a collective reconfirmation, by households, of the very essence of wealth in an age of uncertainty. When warships loom in the Strait of Hormuz and smoke rises over the Donbas plains—forming the macro backdrop—and when digital returns in bank accounts fail to fully offset psychological deficits in security, that tangible, self-authenticating weight of gold becomes the most elemental—and most resilient—bearer of trust. This trend will not reverse merely because a single geopolitical crisis eases or interest rates dip marginally; it is rooted in deep fissures within the global monetary architecture and the synchronous awakening of individual risk consciousness. For China’s financial system, deciphering the paradigm shift behind these figures matters far more than forecasting next quarter’s gold price movement—because the true challenge has never been how to trade gold, but rather how to build an institutional infrastructure capable of hosting this new faith in wealth.