MISSION BRIEF
Intercepted by: {{publication_name}}
The gold is in three places. Warsaw has roughly 20 percent. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York — five floors below Liberty Street, drilled into the bedrock of lower Manhattan — holds another third. The Bank of England's vaults in London hold the rest. 582 tonnes total, owned by the National Bank of Poland, worth approximately $83 billion at Thursday's spot close of $4,524 per ounce. And the man who assembled it, NBP Governor Adam Glapiński, spent the first week of March sitting across from Poland's president proposing to sell a chunk of it — not because the accumulation strategy failed, but because the war next door changed what gold is actually for.
The proposal, which Bloomberg reported March 5 from sources inside the closed-door meeting, was specific: sell down roughly 120 tonnes, generate approximately $13 billion in realized profit, then buy it back in two to three years. Glapiński branded it "Polish SAFE 0%" — a sovereign, interest-free alternative to the EU's €150 billion Security Action for Europe arms-lending program, which President Karol Nawrocki had just vetoed on sovereignty grounds. The legal architecture was still being drafted. The consultation with the European Central Bank hadn't happened. The Prime Minister's government was already committed to tapping the EU funds directly. The plan was a political grenade dressed as monetary policy.
It collapsed within weeks. By May 9, Poland's government — bypassing Nawrocki entirely through a cabinet resolution — signed the EU SAFE agreement anyway, securing €43.7 billion in defense loans, the largest single-country allocation in the program. The first tranche of approximately €6.5 billion was expected before the end of the month. The "Polish SAFE 0%" went nowhere. Glapiński's gold stayed in the vaults — in Warsaw, in London, in New York — and Poland got its war chest from Brussels.
The collapse of "SAFE 0%" doesn't mean the idea was wrong. It means it was early. For the first time since World War II, a sitting central bank governor — of a NATO frontline state — proposed using gold reserves as a direct financing instrument for military spending. That conversation happened in public, in March 2026. The legal framework doesn't exist yet. But the logic of the proposal doesn't go away just because the politics blocked it. Gold that was bought as a hedge against geopolitical risk is now being eyed as collateral for the war it was supposed to hedge against.
Poland bought 95 tonnes in 2025 alone — more than any other central bank on the planet. As recently as September of that year, Glapiński called gold "the only safe investment for state reserves" and said selling it was "absolutely out of the question." By March, he was in a room proposing to sell it. The position hadn't changed. The situation had.
Exciting new Elon Musk Opportunity
What if you could claim a stake in what’s set to be the biggest IPO ever… starting with just $500?
Click here to see the details because everyone is talking about Elon Musk’s SpaceX IPO.
CNBC called it “the big market event of 2026.”
And The New York Times predicted…
This IPO “will unleash gushers of cash for Silicon Valley and Wall Street.”
You see, this is NOT about launching rockets to Mars, satellite internet, or anything you’ve heard from the media.
It’s much bigger than that…
Because this IPO is a key part of Elon Musk’s secret AI masterplan…
A plan that I believe will unlock the full power of artificial intelligence...
Unleashing what Elon Musk is predicting will be…
A $1 quadrillion new wealth wave.
Just to put that into perspective…
That would be enough to send a check for $2.8 million to every single man, woman, and child in America.
That’s how big this opportunity is.
Click here to get the details and I’ll show you how to claim your stake…
Starting with just $500.
THE OPERATION
Two parallel repatriations
Poland is not the only one pulling gold home. Between July 2025 and January 2026, France moved 129 tonnes — approximately $15.1 billion at then-current prices — out of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and back to the Banque de France's vaults in Paris. The operation was conducted across six months, routed through secure air freight, and announced after the fact. No press conference before the first bar left New York. No statement of intent. The gold moved first. The acknowledgment followed.
In Germany, the conversation is louder. The Bundesbank completed a repatriation of 674 tonnes in 2017, but 1,236 tonnes — approximately 37 percent of Germany's total 3,352-tonne reserve — remains at the Federal Reserve in New York, with another 13 percent still in London. By early 2026, German economists and politicians were publicly calling for a full withdrawal from U.S. vaults. The Bundesbank has said no formal plan is under consideration. That is not the same as saying no plan exists.
The trigger for all of this — the event that reset how every European central bank thinks about reserves held abroad — was February 2022. The freezing of $300 billion in Russian central bank assets, executed across Western custodial systems in a matter of days, demonstrated something that no amount of treaty language had made concrete before: gold held in a foreign vault is not your gold. It is your gold subject to the jurisdiction of whoever controls that vault. Poland knows this. France knew it. The Bundesbank's 2017 repatriation was the first act of the same play.
World Gold Council data through Q1 2026 confirms the pattern: Poland added 31 tonnes in Q1 alone, bringing total holdings to 582 tonnes. Uzbekistan added 25 tonnes. Kazakhstan added 13 tonnes. The Czech National Bank logged its 36th consecutive month of purchases. The People's Bank of China continued its unbroken streak of monthly additions. Every one of these buyers — without exception — cites reserve diversification, geopolitical risk, and reduced dependence on dollar-denominated assets as the explicit rationale. Central banks are not buying gold because gold went up. Gold went up because central banks are buying it, and they are buying it because they do not trust the system that holds their other reserves.
Poland's 582 tonnes, stored one-third each in Warsaw, London, and New York, is not fully secure in the way that word is supposed to mean. The London portion trades on the LBMA — it is accessible, liquid, and pledgeable. The New York portion sits in the same building that holds the frozen Russian reserves. Glapiński told the prime minister in March 2026 that he was preparing a draft resolution to bring "a large batch of gold to Poland" — construction is currently underway on a new vault in Warsaw that will be "spacious and large." The bars are still in London. The vault isn't finished yet.
RULES OF ENGAGEMENT
Your exposure
Gold closed Thursday at $4,524 per ounce — down 0.42 percent on the session, down roughly 14 percent from the January 28 record of $5,602, and up 34.7 percent year over year. The January peak came on a single day: a sovereign buying wave that pushed the price to levels not seen in modern financial history, then receded. The retreat since then has been orderly. Central banks didn't stop buying during the pullback — Poland added 31 tonnes in Q1 while prices were elevated, and the World Gold Council confirmed that official sector demand remains the structural floor under the market.
The math on Poland alone is instructive. In 2018, the NBP held 103 tonnes. Today it holds 582 tonnes — a fivefold increase — with a stated target of 700 tonnes and a new vault being built to store the difference. That is a sovereign accumulation program of a scale that, if replicated by three or four other mid-size central banks, would consume a year's worth of global mine production. The Czech National Bank has now bought every single month for three years straight. Uzbekistan's gold holdings now represent 87 percent of its total reserves — not a hedge, a commitment.
Gold at $4,524 is not a crisis price — it's a new floor — and every central bank buying program described in this dossier is adding structural demand that didn't exist five years ago, which means the dollar in your savings account is competing for purchasing power against a monetary system that is quietly, methodically, moving its most trusted reserve asset out of the vaults that underpin dollar credibility and into domestic custody. France pulled $15 billion out of New York. Poland is building a bigger vault. Germany is being asked why 1,236 tonnes of its gold is still in the United States. They are not panicking. They are repositioning. There is a difference — but the direction is the same.
