Basel III makes it official: Gold is money again

For my entire decades-long career in capital markets, I鈥檝e made the case that gold is not just a shiny relic of the past, but a serious, strategic asset for modern investors. After years of pounding the table, it feels pretty good to say that the world鈥檚 central banks鈥攁nd now the US banking system鈥攁re finally catching up.
As of July 1, 2025, gold will officially be classified as a Tier 1, high-quality liquid asset (HQLA) under the Basel III banking regulations. That means US banks can count physical gold, at 100% of its market value, toward their core capital reserves. No longer will it be marked down by 50% as a 鈥淭ier 3鈥 asset, as it was under the old rules.
This is a seismic shift in how regulators perceive gold, and it鈥檚 a long-overdue recognition of what many of us have known for decades: Gold is money. And it鈥檚 the kind of money you want to own when the world is on fire.
Central banks know that gold is real money. Shouldn鈥檛 you?
Obviously, I鈥檓 not the only one who believes this. Central banks have been leading the charge for 15 years. In the first quarter, central banks added to their official reserves, according to the World Gold Council (WGC). That鈥檚 24% above the five-year quarterly average.

This isn鈥檛 a one-off anomaly. It鈥檚 part of a longer-term trend that began in earnest after the 2008 financial crisis and accelerated after gold鈥檚 reclassification under Basel III in 2019. According to the WGC, about say they plan to increase their gold holdings in the next 12 months鈥攖he highest level ever recorded in their survey.
Why are central banks buying gold? The same reason you or I would: to protect against currency debasement, geopolitical turmoil and runaway debt. As global fiat currencies get printed with increasing abandon, I believe the yellow metal remains one of the few truly finite, unprintable stores of value.
So, if the world鈥檚 central banks are moving into gold, shouldn鈥檛 retail investors be doing the same?
The retail reawakening
The answer, thankfully, is yes. According to nearly a quarter of US adults now say gold is the best long-term investment鈥攁 sharp increase from last year, and well above the 16% who say stocks. Only real estate ranked higher.

This could be significant. For the first time in over a decade, Americans say they鈥檙e prioritizing gold over equities. Investors appear to be increasingly skeptical of the stock market鈥檚 near-term trajectory, and they鈥檙e returning to what has historically worked in times of uncertainty.
I鈥檝e said for years that gold belongs in every diversified portfolio. Back in 2020, I told CNBC that I believed on looser monetary policy and central bank balance sheet expansion. Fast forward to today, and the metal is trading at $3,340.
Today I鈥檇 like to adjust my forecast.
With the implementation of President Donald Trump鈥檚 tariffs, continued global uncertainty and rising central bank gold demand, I now believe over the medium- to long-term.
The curious case of gold miners
But here鈥檚 where things get interesting鈥攁nd puzzling. While gold prices continue to make new all-time highs, gold mining stocks have been seeing sustained outflows.
The VanEck Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX), which tracks many of the world鈥檚 largest publicly traded gold producers, has been bleeding capital for months. Even as gold prices surge, weekly fund flows have been negative, with investors pulling billions out of mining equities.

This disconnect is hard to ignore. It points to a deeper concern investors may have about the operational and financial health of mining companies. Unlike physical gold, which simply tracks the spot price, miners are exposed to cost inflation, labor shortages, geopolitical risk and more. These headwinds aren鈥檛 new, though, and they shouldn鈥檛 obscure the fundamental leverage that quality mining stocks offer in a rising gold environment.
Historically, gold stocks tend to lag the metal itself until higher prices are deemed sustainable.
Institutional capital tends to wait for the 鈥渁ll clear鈥 sign. That often means retail investors can front-run the rotation. If gold prices stay elevated鈥攐r go higher, as I expect鈥擨 believe we鈥檒l see renewed flows into the mining space.
Meanwhile, we鈥檝e seen investors increasingly favor physically backed gold ETFs and streaming/royalty companies as lower-risk ways to gain exposure. That鈥檚 understandable. These vehicles offer gold鈥檚 upside with fewer operational headaches.
But let鈥檚 not forget that miners still dig the stuff out of the ground. When margins improve, they can offer significant torque.
Be the bank
Basel III is more than a regulatory change. I believe it鈥檚 a validation. It affirms what many of us have long believed about gold鈥檚 status as a monetary asset and a hedge against chaos.
If the world鈥檚 most powerful financial institutions are increasing their gold exposure, and regulatory bodies are reclassifying it as a top-tier liquid asset, what鈥檚 holding the average investor back?
As always, I recommend a 10% weighting in gold, with 5% in physical gold (bars, coins, jewelry) and 5% in high-quality gold mining stocks, mutual funds and/or ETFs. Remember to rebalance on a regular basis.
(By Frank Holmes, CEO of U.S. Global Investors)
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2 Comments
Around 1997 I wrote to a local newspaper wherein I wrote that “Gold is an irreplaceable investment product that cannot be matched by ficticious investment papers of the world,…..I still have a hard copy of that letter.
Mofsowitz
Very good news