Gold quality is the same worldwide. There are differences in purity which can be accounted for in price, but an oz of gold in Shanghai, London, or New York should fetch the same price within a range. The price range difference should reflect the cost of transporting physical gold from one location to another. The tightness of price differences around the world is a measure of the fissure of globalization and free trade. If the world is in a free trade environment, gold price differences should be within the range of transport costs. If there are large differences in locational prices, trade is disrupted.
A close look at price differences across major gold markets suggests an arbitrage breakdown due to tariff uncertainty in 2025. There has also been a disconnect in physical markets due to the desire of major buyers to hold gold in their own domiciles. As gold has become in short supply in some locations, there has been a disconnect that cannot be solved by the usual form of transportation arbitrage. This is a sign of a bubble, but also a sign that investors and physical users do not want to have geographical uncertainty.





