🇨🇦 Canada Sold ALL Its Gold — And Somehow Nobody Noticed 😳
Once upon a time, in 1965, Canada was sitting on a cozy 1,023 tonnes of gold — roughly $149B in today’s money. Fast-forward a few decades and… poof. Every last ounce sold. Not trimmed. Not diversified. Fully, proudly gone.
Canada then upgraded its strategy by swapping shiny metal for foreign bonds, liquidity, and paper assets, earning the exclusive title of the ONLY G7 country with absolutely zero gold reserves. Achievement unlocked. 🤯
Meanwhile, the others didn’t get the memo:
🇺🇸 USA: ~8,133 tonnes
🇩🇪 Germany: ~3,352 tonnes
Apparently, “just vibes and bonds” wasn’t a universal policy.
This wasn’t a single bad day at the office either. Multiple governments and central bank chiefs — Trudeau, Mulroney, Crow, Thiessen — all agreed on one bold idea: gold was obsolete in a modern financial system. Totally unnecessary. Ancient relic. What could go wrong?
Cut to today 👀
• Inflation is back
• Geopolitics are spicy
• Central banks are hoarding gold again
• Crypto is auditioning as “digital gold”
And suddenly people are asking the inconvenient question: was dumping all that gold actually genius… or just historically awkward? 🤔
Even better: will Canada ever rethink its zero-gold philosophy? Or is this a “never admit defeat” situation?
History has a habit of resurfacing — usually right when everyone swore it was irrelevant.
Ultra-short version:
Canada once had 1,023 tonnes of gold.
Now it has zero.
Modernization masterstroke… or legendary miscalculation?
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