France has taken all its gold from the US: it has gained from the transfer

The Bank of France confirmed yesterday something that had been brewing in silence for a long time: he has withdrawn every last gold bar he had stored in the vaults of the New York Federal Reserve. An operation that normally could have lasted two decades but has suddenly accelerated. The trigger has its own name: Donald Trump. What initially began as a technical operation to update its gold reserves, with the latest movements of the US against its European allies, including France, has become the first major geopolitical movement that has left half of Europe looking at each other. Furthermore, the play has left them with more money than they had. The key is to sell at the right time and place. The first thing to understand is that France did not charter any plane loaded with gold to bring it back to Europe. Instead of physically moving the bullion, the Bank of France made a smarter decision. As the bank explained in a statementbetween July 2025 and January 2026, they have been selling the 129 tons of old gold that was stored in the New York Federal Reserve in the North American gold market. In Xataka The gold of discord: why 14 municipalities of Guadalajara have rebelled against the plan "mineral sovereignty" from Europe In this way, the French have taken advantage of higher gold prices at historic highs. With these income, France has been purchasing gold bars that met the new higher quality standard in the European market, which registered more contained prices, to store those bars directly in its vaults in Paris. The operation was completed in 26 different transactions and generated extraordinary income of 11 billion euros for the French central bank. A result that transformed the 7.7 billion euros in losses that it registered in 2024, into a net profit of 8.1 billion of euros in 2025. Why was there European gold in the US? The history of this gold in New York goes back at the end of World War II. After the conflict, the dollar became the axis of international trade and having reserves in New York allowed countries to sell them quickly and obtain currency to facilitate payments in global trade. Furthermore, with the Cold War raging and the USSR looming, many European governments preferred their gold reserves to be kept in distant New York rather than in Paris or London, protecting their treasury from hypothetical invasions Russian. A first major reduction of that gold reserve came in the sixties, when De Gaulle made the decision to repatriate part of the reserves French and other countries imitated it. But they didn’t take everything. France still maintained 5% of its total reserves on the other side of the Atlantic, a figure that may seem small but is equivalent to a mountain of ingots. With the latest move, France now concentrates all of its 2,437 tons in Paris, becoming the world’s fourth largest holder of gold. In Xataka The safest and most profitable investment you can make today is the same as 3,000 years ago: buy gold The spark that has ignited Europe. This same year It has been known that India has already repatriated 274 tons of gold since 2023, and currently around two-thirds of its total 880.8 tons are in national territory, driven by geopolitical risks and the need for greater control and liquidity. From OMFIF they point out that the location of gold storage has once again become a priority for central banks, especially since Russian assets deposited in third countries were seized following the invasion of Ukraine. However, the spark that has ignited the machinery of repatriation of European gold has been the erratic attitude of Donald Trump. His attacks public to Jerome Powell and its repeated attempts to interfere in monetary policy have generated a growing concern between European central banks over who really controls the institutions that custody their gold. {“videoId”:”x90yx2y”,”autoplay”:false,”title”:”THE LARGEST GOLD MINE IN EUROPE IS IN SPAIN AND NO ONE DARES TOUCH IT”, “tag”:”WEBEDIA-PROD”, “duration”:”483″} Germany and Italy: the next ones in the spotlight. Following France’s move, attention has turned to the central banks of Germany and Italy, the two countries with larger gold reserves on American soil. Germany preserves 1,236 tons in the vaults of New York, 37% of its total reserves, while Italy has 1,053 tons there, 43% of the total. Together, both countries accumulate the equivalent of $245 billion in bullion in New York. Michael Jäger, Vice President of the German Taxpayers’ Federation (Bund der Steuerzahler) and President of the European Taxpayers Association (TAE) declared that “Trump’s unpredictability and his relentless pursuit of revenue means our gold is no longer safe in the Federal Reserve vaults. What happens if the provocation over Greenland continues? The risk that the Bundesbank will not be able to access its gold is increasing. That is why it should repatriate its reserves.” For now, neither country has announced an official decision on the future of its gold in the US. In Xataka | They don’t call him the “gold tycoon” for nothing: he is 82 years old and has won 746% betting on a mine that doesn’t even work Image | Unsplash (Samuel Regan-Asante, Scottsdale Mint) (function() { window._JS_MODULES = window._JS_MODULES || {}; var headElement = document.getElementsByTagName(‘head’)(0); if (_JS_MODULES.instagram) { var instagramScript = document.createElement(‘script’); instagramScript.src=”https://platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js”; instagramScript.async = true; instagramScript.defer = true; headElement.appendChild(instagramScript); – The news France has taken all its gold from the US: it has gained from the transfer was originally published in Xataka by Ruben Andres .

In the last three years, Spain has gained 1.2 million singles. In exchange it has added… 105,000 married people

Spain is (increasingly) a country of singles. Although there are still more married than divorced, separated, widowed or people without an ‘official’ partner, the latest statistics from the INE reveal that the sum of these last categories already exceeds that of those who have said ‘yes I want’. Logical if you take into account that in the last three years the number of married people has grown by 0.5% while the number of single people shot up by 9.2% and the number of divorced people by another 8.8%. These are data that must be handled with some caution, but they show that something is changing. New times, new ways of living. A country of singles. That singleness is gaining strength as a vital plan is nothing new. We have been talking about the ‘great recession’ of romantic love, spin entry of traditional courtship or even how (despite the rise in prices and the difficulty of accessing credit) more and more people You choose to buy your home alone, without sharing expenses with a partner. Despite all of the above, it is still interesting to take a look at the INE statistics on the marital status of the population, especially when (how it just happened) show a newly updated photo. Year Singles Married Widowers Separated 2024 14,532,528 19,058,788 2,909,384 3,228,054 2023 14,357,158 19,017,938 2,911,402 3,141,053 2022 14,058,103 18,877,848 2,912,811 3,049,715 2021 13,304,355 18,953,251 2,899,639 2,966,450 One figure: 14,357,158. The definitive records of the INE show that last year there were 19.06 million married people residing in Spain, 14.53 million single people, 2.91 million widowers and 3.23 million divorced and separated people. If the ‘adult’ population of the country, over 16 years of age, is taken into account, the conclusion is clear: people who have said ‘I do’ continue to represent the largest group. They assume 45.8%compared to 34.9% of singles, 7.8% of divorced people and 7% of widowers. Does the marriage last? Yes. And no. It is true that it is still the largest group if we talk about marital statuses and it is also true that there are more married people in Spain today than in 2021, but the tables from the INE leave another, much less flattering reading: the married population has grown less than the single or divorced population. In 2024 there were in Spain 105,537 marrieds more than three years earlier, representing a growth of 0.55%. If we talk about singles, their number has grown by 1.23 million people during the same period, which translates into a rebound of 9.23%. The group of divorced or separated people has gained 261,604 people in three years, with a growth that is close to 8%. Year Average age of first marriage (men) Women 2023 37 34.9 2018 35.6 33.5 2013 34.4 32.2 Beyond the INE. The INE is not the only indicator that something is changing in Spanish society. Another (also of a statistical nature) is Eurostat, which has been documenting for a long time how we get married later and later. According to your dataIn 2023, on average, Spaniards said ‘I do’ for the first time at the age of 37 and Spanish women at 34.9. It is interesting for several reasons. To begin with, because these data place Spain as the European country in which we later made relations official. If we talk about men (37 years) we are tied with Sweden, but if we focus in women (34.9 years) we are above the Nordic nation, where the average is 34.8. We not only delay our passage through the altar. He has also done it motherhood. In fact, pregnancies among women over 40 years of age have skyrocketed in recent decades to represent close to 10% of the total. The way we face our life horizon has changed so much that there is more and more leisure on offer focused on singles or it is easier, for example, to meet people who decides to buy a home without having a partner. Less ‘I do’. The trend is also reflected in the last yearbook of the Spanish Episcopal Confederation, although in their case the figures reflect religious links. In 2024 the Church registered 31,462 Catholic weddings, below the 33,500 a year before and far from the more than 110,000 in 2007. They are values ​​in line with the latest statistics from the INE, although when handling them it is advisable to keep certain keys in mind: their record only tells us about “civil statuses”, so, remember in 20Minutes Pau Miret, CED researcher, does not include those singles who have decided to change marriage for “non-marital cohabitation.” That is, settled couples who share a home and function in practice as a marriage, but choose not to make it official. Image | Ismail Hamzah (Unsplash) In Xataka | The slow but inexorable “Japanization” of Spain: births have fallen by 50% since the time of the baby boom

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