De Gaulle and the war on the dollar
No country challenged the post-war dollar order more openly than France. In the 1960s President Charles de Gaulle, advised by the economist Jacques Rueff, mounted a deliberate campaign against what he called the “exorbitant privilege” of the United States — its ability to run deficits and settle them in dollars the rest of the world was obliged to hold.
France’s response was to take the Bretton Woods system at its word and convert its surplus dollars into American gold, ounce by ounce. The accumulation pushed French reserves toward 4,200 tonnes by the late 1960s and helped drain the U.S. hoard, accelerating the strains that would lead Nixon to close the gold window in 1971. The era left France with both a vast reserve and a national conviction — that gold is the ultimate guarantor of monetary sovereignty, and that holding it is a form of independence from the financial power of others.
The sales of the 2000s
France’s gold position did not only grow. In the mid-2000s, under an agreement struck during the era of the Central Bank Gold Agreements, the Banque de France sold roughly 590 tonnes between 2004 and 2009, trimming the reserve from over 3,000 tonnes toward today’s 2,437.
The sales were controversial, and in hindsight poorly timed: much of the gold left French vaults before the great bull market that followed the global financial crisis. The experience hardened a lesson that France — like Germany and Italy — has since taken to heart. No significant sales have followed; the reserve has been stable for more than a decade, and the political consensus has shifted firmly toward holding. The episode is now cited across Europe as a cautionary tale about disposing of a strategic asset for short-term gain.
All of it, at home
What most distinguishes France today is location. Where Germany, Italy and others still keep large shares of their gold in New York and London, France holds its entire reserve domestically, in the Banque de France’s “Souterraine” beneath Paris. The vault, dug in the 1920s and sitting on bedrock that can bear the immense weight of the bars, is among the largest in the world.
In recent years the Banque de France has quietly modernized the hoard — re-melting and re-casting older bars to meet the London good-delivery standard, so that the gold can be mobilized, lent or swapped in international markets without question. The result is a reserve that is both fully sovereign — beyond the reach of any foreign jurisdiction — and fully liquid. In an age when the physical location of reserves has become a question of security, France’s model of complete domestic custody looks increasingly prescient.
Sovereignty as doctrine
Gold makes up roughly 82% of France’s reserves, and the country’s attachment to the metal is as much philosophical as financial. The Gaullist conviction that a great power must not depend on another nation’s currency for its ultimate store of value has outlasted the man who articulated it.
That doctrine is once again in fashion. As central banks worldwide rebuild their gold reserves to reduce dollar dependence and insulate themselves from sanctions, France’s long-held instinct — keep a large reserve, keep it at home, keep it liquid — reads less like a relic of the 1960s and more like a template for the present. France did not need a crisis to teach it the value of monetary independence; it has held that view, and that gold, for sixty years.
Where the gold is held
France is one of the very few major holders to store its entire gold reserve on home soil. All 2,437 tonnes sit in “La Souterraine,” the Banque de France’s vault 27 meters beneath Paris near the Palais-Royal — one of the largest gold vaults in the world, recently modernized so that the bars meet international good-delivery standards.