Understanding Gold Pricing in African Markets
Gold sourced from African markets is priced against the LBMA international benchmark, adjusted for verifiable costs including assay certification, export compliance, logistics, and refining allowances. Legitimate exporters do not offer arbitrary “discounts” below market rates—such pricing typically signals illicit material lacking proper documentation. Transparent pricing structures protect both buyer and seller from compliance exposure.

The Pricing Foundation
African gold pricing begins with the LBMA spot price per troy ounce. Exporters then apply transparent deductions:
- Refining allowance (typically 1 to 2 percent based on assay purity)
- Accredited assay certification costs
- Government export permit fees
- Secure logistics and insurance
- Operational overhead for chain of custody management
These deductions are documented and disclosed upfront. Buyers should receive a pricing breakdown showing the LBMA reference rate and itemized adjustments—never a single opaque figure.

Purity Determines Value
Final pricing correlates directly with fire assay results. Material assaying 92 percent purity receives a larger refining allowance than 98 percent material. Reputable exporters never price against XRF readings alone—they wait for accredited laboratory certification before finalizing transaction value. This protects buyers from overpayment on misrepresented grades.
Image: Fire assay report showing precise fineness measurement
Regional Cost Variations
Logistics costs create minor pricing differences across jurisdictions. Ghanaian exports moving through Accra to New York incur different freight expenses than South African shipments from Johannesburg to Shanghai. South Sudanese material requires additional security protocols affecting cost structure. These variations reflect genuine operational factors—not arbitrary markups.
Red Flags to Avoid
Buyers should reject offers featuring:
- Pricing significantly below LBMA benchmarks without documented justification
- Vague explanations of deductions
- Pressure to pay before assay certification
- Refusal to disclose the pricing formula
Such practices often indicate material lacking proper licensing or chain of custody—creating rejection risk at refineries and potential OECD due diligence violations.
AFRICA GOLD’s Transparent Model
Since 2015, AFRICA GOLD has applied consistent pricing tied to LBMA rates with fully disclosed deductions for assay costs, permit fees, and logistics. The company provides buyers with written pricing formulas before engagement and shares assay certificates prior to payment requests. This transparency has sustained partnerships with refineries across the UAE, United States, China, and Europe.

Sustainable gold sourcing requires pricing integrity. Partner with an exporter who ties valuations to global benchmarks with documented, justifiable adjustments—not unexplained discounts that signal compliance risk.
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