MISSION BRIEF
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In the TIC data released April 15, foreign official institutions — central banks, sovereign wealth funds, government reserve managers — were net sellers of $46.1 billion in U.S. long-term securities in February alone, even as private foreign buyers absorbed $147.3 billion and papered over the gap well enough that the headline number read as an inflow. The official money was leaving. The private money was covering the exit.
China and Hong Kong combined have shed $96 billion in Treasuries over the trailing twelve months, bringing their combined position to $962 billion — down more than a third from where it stood a decade ago. Japan, still the largest foreign creditor at $1.13 trillion, has been stationary. The Euro Area, by contrast, loaded another $32 billion in February and now sits at a record $2.0 trillion — which tells you something about who still believes in the paper and who has stopped.
This is the same month — February 2026 — that gold at the Shanghai Gold Exchange hit its highest physical withdrawal pace in eighteen months, per SGE settlement data. The two lines are not unrelated. When official reserve managers leave one asset, the proceeds have to go somewhere. Some of them are going to a vault.
In 2025, for the first time since 1996, global central bank gold reserves — valued at approximately $4.6 trillion — surpassed the total value of foreign-held U.S. Treasuries in sovereign reserve portfolios, according to analysis from the World Gold Council and EBC Financial Group. It took central banks three straight years of buying above 1,000 tonnes annually to get there. The line crossed. It has not crossed back.
At 8:30am ET this morning, the Bureau of Economic Analysis drops its advance estimate for Q1 2026 GDP — the first official read on whether this economy is growing or coasting on fumes. The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow model, updated April 29, tracked Q1 at 1.2% annualized. The prior quarter came in at 0.5%, revised down twice from the original 1.4% print. What the number says matters less than what the pattern says.
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THE OPERATION
Treasury rotation
The mechanics work like this. Foreign official institutions do not wire-transfer their Treasuries out through a single custodian on a single day — they rotate. They let maturities run off without reinvesting. They route secondary-market sales through the London clearing infrastructure — which is why the UK shows up at $897 billion in TIC holdings — so the true seller is obscured by the custodial chain. What TIC shows you is where the bonds are held in custody. What it cannot show you is the nationality of the final decision-maker who chose not to roll them over.
China has been doing this for years — running its actual accumulation through Belgian and Luxembourg custodians, so the recorded decline in the "China" row understates what Beijing has actually exited while the Belgium and Luxembourg rows swell in ways that don't match those countries' economic size. As of the April 15 TIC release covering February data, total foreign holdings still reached a nominal record of $9.49 trillion — but the composition of who holds it, and why, has shifted in ways the headline number is designed to obscure.
The gold side of the operation is less opaque. Poland added over 20 tonnes in the first two months of 2026, continuing a multi-year program toward a 700-tonne target — explicitly framed by Governor Glapiński as a "national security" decision. Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan have been buying every quarter. China's reported reserves grew again. The World Gold Council projects 750 to 850 tonnes of central bank gold purchases for 2026 — still historically exceptional, and every tonne bought is a tonne not parked in a custodial account at a U.S. clearing bank.
Central banks became net sellers of Treasuries in March 2025, according to Bank of America analysis — a trend that has accelerated since. Simultaneously, gold's share of global central bank reserves crossed above Treasuries' share for the first time in 29 years. These are not two separate stories. They are one reallocation, running in both directions at once: out of paper and into metal, routed through exchanges and vaults that sit entirely outside SWIFT, outside U.S. custodial oversight, and outside the reach of any sanctions designation.
The private foreign money — hedge funds, sovereign wealth funds operating commercially, European institutions — is still buying Treasuries, still making the auction bid-to-cover ratios look healthy, still allowing the Treasury to fund a deficit running between $1.8 and $2.2 trillion annually. The official money is quietly rotating out. It's a slow substitution, not a sudden shock. The slow ones are the ones that don't get stopped.
RULES OF ENGAGEMENT
Your exposure
Gold closed Wednesday at $4,557/oz and opened Thursday at $4,566 — up more than $1,260 over the past twelve months. Spot is down from its 2026 peak, which means it has already absorbed a partial pullback and is still holding above $4,500. The AAA national average for a gallon of regular gasoline sits at $4.23 as of April 29 — up from $2.95 a year ago, a 43% increase — with California at $5.98 and the national average having cleared $4.00 for the first time since August 2022. The IMF cut its full-year 2026 U.S. growth forecast to 1.8% in April. The Atlanta Fed's last GDPNow print before this morning's BEA release was 1.2%.
When growth is 1.2% and inflation is sticky — core PCE last printed at 2.7%, above target, with energy costs from a $90-to-$100 crude environment still transmitting through the supply chain — the Fed cannot cut. It cannot cut because cutting would accelerate the dollar's depreciation, which is already happening: the U.S. dollar index fell more than 10% in 2025, its steepest annual decline in three decades. A weaker dollar means every imported good costs more. Every barrel of oil, every container of electronics, every tonne of grain priced globally in dollars that you buy in dollars that buy less than they did last year.
Foreign official institutions sold $46.1 billion in U.S. securities in a single month while the headline number was reported as an inflow — the private money covering the exit, the bond market functioning, everything looking fine — and this morning at 8:30am the BEA will release a GDP number that the Atlanta Fed's model tracked at 1.2% annualized, which is what 1.2% growth plus 2.7% core inflation plus $4.23 gasoline plus a dollar that lost 10% of its value last year actually feels like from the inside of a grocery store or a gas station or a fixed income that hasn't kept pace with any of it.

