Shortage of silver coins forces global mints to ration sales

Reuters Updated - January 22, 2018 at 10:09 PM.

Bullion dealers, who offer next-day delivery, are now taking orders several weeks out

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The global silver-coin market is in the grips of an unprecedented supply squeeze, forcing some mints to ration sales and step up overtime while sending US buyers racing abroad to fulfil a sudden surge in demand.

The US Mint began setting weekly sales quotas for its flagship American Eagle silver coins in July because it can’t meet demand, and the Canadian mint followed suit after record monthly sales in July.

In Australia, the Perth Mint sold a record of more than 2.5 million ounces of silver this month, nearly four times more than in August, and has begun rationing supply of a new line of coins this month, a mint official said.

“Silver [coin] demand is absolutely through the roof,” said Neil Vance, wholesale manager at the Perth Mint. “There seems to be a bit of frenzy as people think there is a shortage of silver. But, in fact, it is a (crunch in) manufacturing capacity.”

Sudden interest

While demand has risen in response to the slump in spot prices to $14.33 an ounce in late July and its subsequent drop to fresh six-year lows below $14 an ounce in August, mint officials said they were caught out by the sudden interest in coins. In July, the US mint halted sales for almost three weeks after running out of “blanks”, which are used to make coins. Some investors like to own physical metal to protect from volatility in other assets, particularly currencies and stocks, and to hedge against geopolitical and economic upheaval. The CBOE Volatility index, or VIX, of US stocks briefly jumped to its highest since January 2009 earlier this year.

At the US Mint in West Point, New York, where the American Eagle is made, the plant is operating three shifts and paying staff overtime, a spokesman said.

The Austrian Mint, which has begun allocating sales of its Philharmonic silver coins, has increased production of silver blanks after higher-than-expected demand in July and August, a spokeswoman said.

Mom and pop investors

Dealers and mints trace the supply squeeze to a burst of buying by mom-and-pop investors in the US , who scrambled to scoop up coins they considered to be at bargain levels after spot silver prices in early July sank to six-year lows.

The spread between silver and gold, a closely watched gauge for the precious metals markets, has risen to its highest in the third quarter since a brief silver frenzy following the financial crisis.

Silver coins typically outsell gold anyway because they cost less, but the wide spread meant the silver price is 76 times cheaper than gold, making it even more appealing than usual to investors.

The US Mint sold 14.26 million ounces of American Eagle silver coins in the third quarter, the highest on records going back to 1986. The Canadian mint has been limiting sales of its silver Maple Leaf coins since July after record monthly sales that month, an official told Reuters .

With North American mints overwhelmed by orders, investors and collectors were forced to look overseas for increasingly scarce supplies, triggering a domino effect in Europe and Asia.

While such buying binges are not uncommon in the coin world, and the US has allocated sales of silver coins several times since prices of silver plummeted in 2013, this episode has lasted far longer, and its effect more pronounced, than in the past, dealers say.

Plunging silver

The silver spree is also notably more intense than in gold coins. US Mint sales of gold coins had their best quarterly performance since the second quarter of 2010, but mints aren’t yet straining to keep up. Still, the rush of coin buying has failed to offset a year-long silver rout by institutional and retail investors betting on further gains in the dollar, US equities and an improving US economy.

Prices have fallen 7 per cent this year, are on track for their third yearly loss and down by 70 per cent from all-time highs of $50 hit in April 2011.

Holdings in the silver-backed exchange traded funds, which were popular with investors during the financial crisis that followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers, sank to below 518 million ounces this week, their lowest in almost three years.

For now, however, coin dealers are riding the wave. Bullion dealers around the globe who typically offer next-day delivery are now taking silver coin orders several weeks out.

“I don't expect things to get better until next year,” said Gregor Gregersen, founder and director of retailer Silver Bullion based in Singapore.

Published on October 1, 2015 16:11