The London Bullion Market Association has released clearing volume data for the London gold market for the first time, offering the industry an unprecedented look at the scale of physical and paper gold flows through the world’s largest OTC bullion trading hub.
The London Bullion Market Association, which oversees the global benchmark for gold and silver pricing, has taken a significant transparency step by publishing gold clearing volume figures for the first time. The disclosure shines a light on a market that, despite its central role in global gold price discovery, has historically operated with limited public data.
London is the world’s dominant over-the-counter gold trading center. Transactions settled through the London Precious Metals Clearing Limited system — the infrastructure that underpins interbank gold transfers — represent an enormous share of global gold activity each day. Until this release, the full scale of those flows was largely opaque to outside observers, including many institutional market participants.
Transparency in the bullion market has been a growing priority since around 2014, when regulators and industry bodies began pushing for reforms following benchmark-manipulation investigations in several commodities markets. The LBMA has since introduced an independently administered LBMA Gold Price auction and taken steps to improve trade reporting standards.
Publishing clearing data adds another layer to that effort. Clearing volumes — which track the net amount of gold transferred between clearing members to settle trades — give analysts and investors a clearer sense of trading activity trends over time, even if they do not capture every transaction in the broader market.
For precious metals investors, greater data availability from London matters because the city’s OTC market sets the tone for gold prices worldwide. When London trading is active or stressed, spot prices globally tend to respond. Better visibility into clearing flows could help analysts identify periods of elevated demand or unusual positioning that might precede price moves.
We’ll be watching whether expanded LBMA data releases — including any future silver clearing figures — continue to reshape how analysts model London market activity.


