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06.17.2009 3:22 pm

Gold coin shortage appears to be over

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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Here’s another sign that the financial panic may be over: The U.S. Mint is no longer rationing sales of its gold and silver coins. Mint News Blog reports:

The news comes via a brief memorandum sent to authorized purchasers of US Mint bullion coins, which stated, “Effective immediately, the United States is lifting the allocation process. You may place your orders under the standard ordering procedures.”

Authorized purchasers are the wholesalers who can buy the coins directly from the Mint. They sell to dealers, who say that all forms of bullion were in high demand during the financial meltdown. The silver Eagle had been on allocation since April 2008, the gold version since August.

Clay Teague, office manager of St. Louis dealer Scotsman Coin, tells me that he can now get Eagles within a week to 10 days of placing an order, compared with three to six weeks at the height of the panic. “Demand seems to still be out there,” Teague said. “I’m taking orders all the time.”

Mint News says , though, that sales have fallen well below their peak levels:

Sales of Silver Eagle bullion coins had risen to a peak of 3,132,000 ounces in March, before receding in April, and falling further in May to 1,904,500 ounces. Sales of Gold Eagle bullion coins had reached a peak of 147,500 ounces in April, before dropping to 65,000 in May. Notably, even the reduced sales figures from last month remain far above year over year and historical sales comparisons.

The Mint also has suspended sales of the coins’ proof and mint versions, which are popular with collectors. There’s no word on when those sales might resume.

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3 comments

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If the shortage is over, then why has the Mint discontinued many variants of gold and silver coins they normally release. The Mint still claims difficulty in obtaining enough planchets, so how is the shortage over? Maybe just less severe… for now.

— Goldie
7:23 pm June 18th, 2009

The mint is LYING,,,,,, Dont think that there is an actual shortage ,,,,,
they are just following orders and have scaled back availability,,,,,,,,,

they have money problems,,, and managment,,, issues,,,, trust the free market,,, if they would actualy offer real money and not play financial games,,, there would be ample supply of blanks offered for sale,,,,

the more broke the government gets,, the more games they play with how and when they pay for comodities….

— Joseph Lieberman
3:20 pm June 19th, 2009

Liars.. Liars..

This is not the correct way to look at statistics. You can not compare the same months with in the same year and call out a decline in demands when one sees declining purchases. You must compare year by year.

So
In April 2009 the US Mint made 2,518,000
In April 2008 the US Mint made 1,584,000
In April 2007 the US Mint made 280,000

The same result goes for May.. June.. July… I see an explosion in demand that the US mint is too blind to see themselves !!!!

— Ahmed
4:46 am July 14th, 2009