Home/Countries/Equatorial Guinea/Total Reserves incl. Gold (USD)

Equatorial GuineaTotal Reserves incl. Gold (USD)

Category: Fiscal & MonetarySource: World Bank World Development IndicatorsGlobal Rank: #131 of 172
Latest Value
$1.54B
2023
YoY Change
+5.5%
20222023
Global Rank
#131
of 172 countries
Maximum
$4.57B
2013
Minimum
$23.0M
2000
CAGR
+20.0%
24 years
Last
$1.54B
Previous
$1.46B
Highest
$4.57B
Lowest
$23.0M
Source
World Bank World Development Indicators
Source: World Bank World Development Indicators

Historical Data

YearValueChange
2023$1.54B+5.5%
2022$1.46B+3192.5%
2021$44.3M-27.2%
2020$60.8M+49.0%
2019$40.8M-16.6%
2018$48.9M+7.5%
2017$45.5M-27.0%
2016$62.3M-94.8%
2015$1.21B-58.5%
2014$2.91B-36.3%
2013$4.57B+3.9%
2012$4.40B+44.0%
2011$3.05B+30.2%
2010$2.35B-27.8%
2009$3.25B-26.6%
2008$4.43B+15.2%
2007$3.85B+25.4%
2006$3.07B+45.9%
2005$2.10B+122.5%
2004$945.0M+297.6%
2003$237.7M+168.5%
2002$88.5M+25.0%
2001$70.9M+207.9%
2000$23.0M

Top Countries — Total Reserves incl. Gold (USD)

#CountryValueYear
1China$3.46T2024
2Japan$1.23T2024
3United States$910.04B2024
4Switzerland$909.37B2024
5India$643.04B2024
6Russian Federation$597.22B2023
7Saudi Arabia$463.87B2024
8Hong Kong SAR, China$425.55B2023
9Korea, Rep.$418.22B2024
10Singapore$383.95B2024
View all 172 countries →

About This Indicator

Definition

Reserve assets are external assets, including monetary gold, that are readily available to and controlled by monetary authorities for meeting balance of payments financing needs, for intervention in exchange markets to affect the currency exchange rate, and for other related purposes (such as maintaining confidence in the currency and the economy, and serving as a basis for foreign borrowing). Reserve assets must be denominated and settled in foreign currency. This indicator is expressed in current prices, meaning no adjustment has been made to account for price changes over time. This indicator is expressed in United States dollars.

Methodology

Data compiled by International Financial Statistics database, International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Source: World Bank - World Development IndicatorsView original source →