Wrote By:Global Economist 2025/11
1. Current Status of Japan’s Gold Reserves
- As of the first quarter of 2025, Japan’s gold reserves remain unchanged at 845.97 tonnes.
- That has been steady over recent quarters.
- In the Bank of Japan’s own asset statements (as of August 2024), “Gold” is listed as part of its holdings, with value in yen terms: ¥441,253,409 thousand (i.e. about ¥441.25 billion) in gold assets
- Thus, gold is a recognized component of BOJ’s balance sheet, though in absolute terms it is relatively modest compared to other reserve assets.
2. Japan’s Approach: Stability, Not Aggression
From publicly available data and observed behavior, Japan seems to pursue a steady-maintenance posture rather than an aggressive accumulation strategy. Some key observations:
- Japan’s gold reserve levels have shown little to no change over recent quarters/years.
- Relative to many central banks that are actively increasing gold, Japan’s reserve strategy appears quite conservative.
- The proportion of gold within total foreign reserves appears moderate—not a dominant reserve asset in Japan’s reserve portfolio. (Some sources discuss gold as a smaller share compared to U.S. Treasury, foreign currency assets, etc.)
- In the BOJ’s asset breakdown table, “Gold” appears as a fixed line item; it is present but not dynamically fluctuating.
Taken together, the evidence suggests Japan is not currently following the “central bank gold buying surge” trend in a visibly aggressive way.
3. Possible Factors Behind Japan’s Cautious Gold Policy
Why might Japan maintain stability rather than expansion in gold holdings? Some plausible factors:
| Factor | Reasoning / Implication |
|---|---|
| Opportunity Cost & Yield Considerations | Gold doesn’t produce interest or yield. With large liabilities or demand for yield, shifting reserves to bonds or interest-bearing assets may appear more efficient. |
| Priority on Liquidity & Foreign Assets | Japan’s foreign reserves policy seems focused on liquidity, foreign bonds, currencies, and interventions (FX). Gold is less liquid in some contexts. |
| Currency / Exchange Policy Orientation | Since the yen is central to domestic monetary concerns, Japan may emphasize forex tools and reserve currency assets over gold. |
| Conservative Reserve Strategy | Maintaining a stable base is lower risk than frequent repositioning. Japan may see gold as a “safe anchor” but not as a tactical lever. |
| Disclosure / Market Signaling Sensitivity | Large gold purchase announcements could provoke currency or bond market reactions; Japan may prefer to avoid such signaling. |
| Historical & Institutional Legacy | Post-Bretton Woods, Japan moved away from linking gold to monetary base; gold holds symbolic / residual value rather than primary reserve role. |
4. Outlook & Points to Watch
While Japan has been cautious, the global trend toward central bank gold accumulation could eventually influence Japan’s policy:
- If global reserve portfolios shift significantly toward gold, Japan may revisit its reserve mix to avoid relative under-diversification.
- In episodes of currency volatility, inflation pressure, or geopolitical stress, Japan may marginally increase gold holdings as a buffer.
- Any change in BOJ / Ministry of Finance statements or reserve management policy could be a signal—e.g. public acknowledgment of gold as a strategic reserve tool.
- The ratio of gold in Japan’s reserves and its trajectory over coming years would be telling: whether it remains flat or slowly edges upward.
- Japan’s domestic and international financial context (e.g. yield curves, debt burden, yen strength/weakness) will mediate whether gold becomes more attractive relative to alternative assets.

