is the best way to manage your money. Go there now »

Sign up or log in to mint.com

Going for the World’s Gold

Share This

With the economy in crisis, gold is viewed as an increasingly solid investment. Even in a slowing economy, gold prices improved 31% between 2007 and 2008, and reached prices in excess of $900 per ounce. It is still seen as a very safe investment compared to other commodities and the market as a whole. But have you ever wondered where you can find the largest reserves of this precious metal that is propping up the world’s economies?

Biggest Gold Mines

For the past century, gold mining has been dominated – in terms of production – by North America, Europe and South Africa. During this time, the mines were owned and run almost exclusively by private enterprises from these countries, and operations expanded into other regions as demand increased. Today, there are over 192 gold-producing countries.

The highest yields come mostly from Asia and Australia, and the largest of the world’s mines now include the Grasberg Mine in Papua, Indonesia and the Super Pit in New South Wales, Australia.

Grasberg mine – Indonesia (source)

Super Pit in Australia (source)

As of 2007, China is now officially the world’s largest producing country. At 276 metric tons (roughly 9.7 million ounces) per annum, China now produces over 10% of the world’s total gold production. It’s safe to say that China now experiencing its “gold rush”, which many of the western countries experienced during the nineteenth century. In fact, China has surpassed South Africa, which led the world in gold production from 1905 to 2007 to become the largest gold producing country in the world.

(source)

There have been some other noteworthy discoveries elsewhere in the world, such as the Great Mongolian Gold Rush of 2001 and the Apui Gold Rush in Brazil in 2006, but China is at the forefront of the discovery of new gold deposits. In 2007 alone, discoveries of 162 tons and 122 tons were found in remote areas, and with China’s expansive land mass this trend is only expected to continue.

Biggest Gold Reserves

With regards to reserves, however, currently most of the world’s gold is still heavily concentrated in the hands of the world’s wealthiest nations. Nearly two-thirds of all the world’s reserves are held by the United States and the European Union (With Germany as the principal reserves-holder) at 27% and 37% respectively. Translated in monetary terms, this means that the US holds approximately $241 Billion in gold reserves, most of which is still the trusty Civil War era Fort Knox.

(source)

Due to the recent high demand of gold, many small-scale farmers have entered the gold mining industry in an attempt to strike it rich, or at the very least support their families. There is an estimated 20 million small-scale miners around the world, with approximately 100 million people directly dependent on this type of artisanal mining. Many of these miners are from Africa, where recent discoveries have led many in recent years to begin pursuing this relatively untapped region (besides the aforementioned South Africa). For the most part this includes Africans from many of the poorer countries that are able to mine on tribal lands, alongside larger mining conglomerates to which many countries are now leasing their land.

Largest Gold Rush in US History

The Largest Gold Rush in US History was the California Gold Rush of 1848 to 1852, which saw the westward migration of 300,000 men, women and children vying for the opportunity to strike it rich. This was the largest gold rush of its kind, and still is the benchmark by which gold discoveries elsewhere in the world are measured. News of the California gold rush stimulated interest and consequent prospecting elsewhere in the world. This eventually led to the gold rushes in Australia, South Africa, Canada and in Western Europe.

(source)

Largest Gold Nugget Ever Found

The largest gold nugget ever recorded, was discovered by John Deason and Richard Oates in 1869, During the height of the Australian gold rush. Found in Moliagul, Victoria, Deason and Oates named the nugget “Welcome Stranger.” This huge nugget weighed in at a whopping 71kg, and fetched at the time, about £9,300.

(source)

The Largest Gold Deposits in the World:

Since the South African Gold Rush (1896-) nearly 40% of the gold mined in the world came from the Witwatersrand basin in South Africa. According to a 2002 article by National Geographic, scientists estimate that one-third of the world’s un-mined gold resources remain in this region.

(source)

The Most Expensive Gold Coin

In 2002, the one of the world’s rarest collector coins sold for the sum of $7.6 Million. The coin, the 1933 Double Eagle, was one of the last of its kind before the big gold meltdown in the US. After being in the hands of Egyptian royalty, it found it’s way back to New York years later.

(source)

It was gold’s perceived scarcity that originally lead to its worth. But even with the world’s central banks stockpiling gold at a record pace, and the mining conglomerates coming up with ever more creative ways to find it, this remains one investing strategy truly worth its weight.

16 Comments so far

leave a comment
  1. You neglected to mention that pricing gold in dollars will lead to apparent fluctuations in price that are actually a result of the dollar changing in value relative to other currencies. If you want to speculate in currencies, there are far more effective ways of doing so.

    Also rather bizarrely many central banks have been “renting” their gold to others who then sell it, buying it back later if necessary (aka a short sale). There is a Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_Anti-Trust_Action_Committee which claims market manipulation. You can see some of their claims at http://www.gata.org/node/wallstreetjournal

  2. Dustin

    I have always been fascinated by the idea of the gold rush and what it must have been like for people to leave their family in friends in great search of the dream of finding gold!

    I have read many different books regarding this subject and I feel that the most enjoyable book that I have read so far is “A Pennsylvania Mennonite and the California Gold Rush” it is a first hand account of a man who leaves Pennsylvania and travels to California to make it big. I myself am from PA so it made the book all the more enjoyable for me. You can get the book on amazon or from sunburypress.com

    Maybe I should leave home in search for gold!

  3. The super pit is in Western Australia, not New South Wales.

  4. >>>It was gold’s perceived scarcity that originally lead to its worth.

    I think it’s also worth mentioning that gold’s perceived medicinal/healthful value is more likely the reason it originally became valuable, which is also the reason for silver’s value. Both should be considered highly essential to humans for intake, and there is a massive and growing body of evidence to prove such claims. It is modern corporatism that is in conflict with these medicinal claims because the metals cannot be patented for such personal uses. And these two metals won’t be the last offerings from mother nature that get kookified for competition’s sake. Besides, why would something be valuable just because it is scarce? That’s silly – there are plenty of metals and minerals that are much rarer that don’t have such perceived value.

  5. Nathan Jenkins

    Do your home work. The super pit is part of Kalgoorlie/Boulder in Western Australia

  6. Exoteric

    The Super Pit is in Kalgoorlie-Boulder, Western Australia, not New South Wales as listed here.

  7. Will we ever find away to get out of the bank hands???

    they got the golds and they rent it, sell it and buy it back?

    does anyone else notice how crazy that sounds?

  8. Patrick

    What you forgot to mention was the price of gold is rising! Get Cash 4 Gold now!

    “I got 900 dollars from my old gold jewlery!”

    Cash 4 Gold!

  9. http://news.goldseek.com/LemetropoleCafe/1232380800.php

    has more of what Roger was talking about, and readers should NOT believe assertions that central banks are accumulating gold absent better proof than what appears in the article. What they’ve done is leased gold at VERY low interest rates, which has caused a “carry trade” and other distortions which are only now becoming apparent. I’m sure “capitalism” will be blamed when this hits the fan, much like “deregulation” is used to describe the results of $20 Billion more in regulatory spending…

  10. Largest gold deposit is worth more now considering the value of gold is up but 9,300 pounds still seems low.

  11. Goldberg

    The NY Fed also is the largest gold repository in the world, holding 5,000 metric tons of gold 8 stories below ground on Manhattan bedrock. There is more gold there than at Fort Knox, although it is mostly foreign countries’ reserves.

  12. While Fort Knox has indeed been around as a military site since the civil war, the bullion depository has only been around since 1937. Before then the gold was stored in various banks, mostly in New York and Philadelphia. History Channel had a show about Fort Knox today.

  13. What a shameless linkbait…

  14. Since the Bretton Woods Accord, wasn’t gold left to others? Isn’t Knox empty of gold?

  15. Nice article with some good pictures and info. It’s interesting to see just how much gold is produced in Australia and Asia.

    I’ve heard some stories of people finding multiple-ounce gold nuggets laying on the ground here in the US, but the “largest gold nugget ever found” puts all those accounts to shame. I can’t even imagine the feeling of running across a gold nugget that weighs as much as I do. Imagine packing that bugger out of the gold fields.

    Keep in mind that gold nuggets and other gold “investments” should be viewed as a long term preservation of wealth, and not as a typical money making investment. The purchasing value of currencies will vary which is one factor affecting gold prices but over time, a specific amount of gold will always be able to buy essentially the same amount of goods or services.

    Gold holds value over the long term while currencies depreciate.

    Happy Hunting!

  16. Hi, I really have enjoyed your site. Thank You.

Leave a Comment

How Mint Can Help

See Where You Spend

Mint.com auto-categorizes all of your transactions so you’ll always know where your money goes. Find out more »