Vaneck did the math to find the “real price of gold” if it were to reclaim its role as the global reserve asset, given that central banks have maintained steady demand. It estimated that each ounce of gold would be priced at $184,211 if adopted as broad money.
With gold recently breaking records due to geopolitical tensions and other factors, investors want to assess the real limit to gold’s upside.
Vaneck, a global asset management investment firm with over $181 billion in assets under management (AUM), ran numbers to estimate the “real price of gold,” meaning its price if it were adopted as the global reserve standard, substituting the U.S. dollar.
The company completed this exercise as the trend of central banks’ gold purchases has solidified, and there are questions about the longevity of the U.S. dollar as a dominant currency.

To reach this “reserve price,” Vaneck divided money liabilities by gold reserves, using two benchmarks for this calculation. The first one includes only central bank reserves and physical money -defined as “base money”- and a second one, which adds savings deposits and money market funds -labeled as “broad money.”
Using the base money benchmark, gold would need to trade at $39,210 per ounce. Also, if gold were to become broad money, it would have to trade at $184,211 per ounce.
“These figures represent the price required to ‘cover’ the outstanding money liabilities in a scenario where gold becomes the primary reserve asset again,” Vaneck explained.
Nonetheless, levered countries like the United Kingdom and Japan would be more affected in a reset scenario, with implied gold prices of over $420K and $300K respectively, due to their high level of money printed compared to their gold reserves.
Conversely, countries like Russia and Kazakhstan would fare much better due to their high level of gold reserves.
While Vaneck’s team does not believe the dollar will lose its status as reserve currency, it does envision a future where it “shares that role with gold and the bonds of fiscally disciplined emerging markets.”
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