The :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}’s gold reserves have crossed the $100 billion mark for the first time, reaching approximately $102.365 billion as of October 10 2025. Gold’s share within India’s overall forex reserves has climbed to about 14.7%, the highest since 1996-97. This gain is driven by soaring bullion valuations rather than large incremental purchases; RBI only added 4 tonnes Jan-Sept 2025 vs. 50 tonnes same period last year. The shift reflects the metal’s rising role in global central-bank diversification and India’s deep cultural investment base.
The :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}’s gold reserves have crossed the $100 billion mark for the first time, reaching approximately $102.365 billion as of October 10 2025. Gold’s share within India’s overall forex reserves has climbed to about 14.7%, the highest since 1996-97. This gain is driven by soaring bullion valuations rather than large incremental purchases; RBI only added 4 tonnes Jan-Sept 2025 vs. 50 tonnes same period last year. The shift reflects the metal’s rising role in global central-bank diversification and India’s deep cultural investment base.
India’s gold reserves reached $102.4 billion, with bullion’s share of forex reserves rising to a 30-year high of ~14.7%.
The :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}’s gold reserves have crossed the $100 billion mark for the first time, reaching approximately $102.365 billion as of October 10 2025. Gold’s share within India’s overall forex reserves has climbed to about 14.7%, the highest since 1996-97. This gain is driven by soaring bullion valuations rather than large incremental purchases; RBI only added 4 tonnes Jan-Sept 2025 vs. 50 tonnes same period last year. The shift reflects the metal’s rising role in global central-bank diversification and India’s deep cultural investment base.
The :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}’s gold reserves have crossed the $100 billion mark for the first time, reaching approximately $102.365 billion as of October 10 2025. Gold’s share within India’s overall forex reserves has climbed to about 14.7%, the highest since 1996-97. This gain is driven by soaring bullion valuations rather than large incremental purchases; RBI only added 4 tonnes Jan-Sept 2025 vs. 50 tonnes same period last year. The shift reflects the metal’s rising role in global central-bank diversification and India’s deep cultural investment base.