Uzbekistan’s Gold, Hard Currency Reserves Down by $2.4 Billion in 2024

As of March 1, 2024, the official reserve assets of Uzbekistan amounted to $32.19 billion, having decreased by $2.37 billion in January and February, according to data from the central bank.

The regulator indicated that foreign-currency reserves dropped by $381.5 million in February and by $1.44 billion in January, with the combined decline of $1.82 billion reducing the remaining total to $7.55 billion.

The price of gold dropped to $2,066 per ounce from $2,076 in January — and to $2,059 by the end of February. However, in March, the price has set new records and is closing in on $2,200 per ounce.

At the end of 2023, Uzbekistan’s so-called financial cushion was $34.56 billion, down $1.2 billion from the previous year. That was the first year-over-year decline in reserves since 2018. Over the course of the year, the physical volume of the country’s gold reserves dropped by nearly 25 tons.

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Times of Central Asia

Askar Alimzhanov graduated from the journalism department of the Kazakh State University named after S. Kirov, then worked as a correspondent for the daily republican newspaper Leninskaya Smen. He then moved to the United States to be a reporter for the daily newspaper "Cape Cod Times" in Hayanis, Massachusetts, (USA) under the journalist exchange program between the Union of Journalists of the USSR and the New England Society of News Editors. Since then, he has helped build transparency and understanding of Central Asia region in various executive level positions at esteemed media organizations including "Akbar"(Alma-Ata) international center for journalism, the Khabar News agency, the Television and Radio Corporation "Kazakhstan" JSC, and MIR- Kazakhstan.

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