China's Panda gold series has changed its panda design annually since 1982 — a deliberate policy decision by the People's Bank of China intended to drive collector demand and discourage melting. The 2021 issue was struck during a year when global gold demand spiked sharply amid pandemic-driven economic uncertainty, and mint allocations to Western distributors tightened noticeably.
The 3-gram denomination was introduced in 2016 when China converted the series from troy ounce weights to metric, a move that briefly disrupted the secondary market as dealers recalibrated premium structures.
China's Panda gold series has changed its panda design annually since 1982 — a deliberate policy decision by the People's Bank of China intended to drive collector demand and discourage melting. The 2021 issue was struck during a year when global gold demand spiked sharply amid pandemic-driven economic uncertainty, and mint allocations to Western distributors tightened noticeably.
The 3-gram denomination was introduced in 2016 when China converted the series from troy ounce weights to metric, a move that briefly disrupted the secondary market as dealers recalibrated premium structures.