Istanbul, Jan. 31 () - Annual global gold demand gained 4.0 percent on highest central bank buying in 50 years, World Gold Council (WGC) said on Thursday.
Gold demand in 2018 reached 4,345.1 tonnes, up from 4,159.9 tonnes in 2017 and in line with the five-year average of 4,347.5 tonnes. A multi-decade high in central bank buying (651.5t) drove growth.
Demand was bumped up in Q4 by 112.4 tonnes of ETF inflows, but annual inflows into these products (of 68.9 tonnes) were 67 percent lower than 2017.
Investment in bars and coins accelerated in the second half of the year, up 4.0 percent to 1,090.2 tonnes in 2018. Full year jewellery demand was steady at 2,200 tonnes.
Gold used in technology climbed marginally to 334.6 tonnes in 2018, although growth ran out of steam in Q4. Annual gold supply firmed slightly to 4,490.2 tonnes, with mine production inching up to a new high of 3,364.9 tonnes.
According to WGC data;
- Central banks added 651.5 tonnes to official gold reserves in 2018, the second highest yearly total on record. Net purchases jumped to their highest since the end of US dollar convertibility into gold in 1971, as a greater pool of central banks turned to gold as a diversifier.
- Annual jewellery demand was virtually unmoved: down just 1 tonne from 2017. Gains in China, the US and Russia broadly offset sharp losses in the Middle East. Indian demand was stable at 598t (-4t). 
- ETFs and similar products saw annual inflows of 68.9t down from 206.4 tonnes in 2017. Stock market volatility and signs of faltering economic growth in key markets fuelled a global Q4 recovery, but Europe was the only region to see net growth over the year.
- Retail investment in gold bars and coins posted annual growth of 4.0 percent. Coin demand surged to reach a five-year high of 236.4 tonnes, the second highest on record. Demand for gold bars held steady at 781.6 tonnes, the fifth year in succession of holding in a firm 780-800 tonnes range.
- 2018 saw marginal gains in the volume of gold used in technology, crimped by Q4 slowdown. After healthy gains during Q1-Q3, a combination of slowing smartphone sales, the trade war and mounting uncertainty over global economic growth, contributed to a 5 percent decline in Q4.