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Coin shortages and rationing are in our future

IMG Auteur
Publié le 12 janvier 2014
580 mots - Temps de lecture : 1 - 2 minutes
( 12 votes, 2,9/5 ) , 2 commentaires
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Rubrique : Marchés
The extraordinary demand for precious metals coins following the 2008 global financial crisis caught the minting industry by surprise, resulting in never before seen coin rationing and shortages.

It seems not much has changed, with recent reports that the UK Royal Mint ran out of 2014 Sovereign gold coins due to "exceptional demand", as well as the continuation for over one year of an allocation program first put into place early 2013 by the US Mint on its ever popular silver Eagle bullion coins.

While these recent events have been limited to specific coins, with availability of other leading bullion coins like the Perth Mint’s gold Kangaroo not affected, it does seem to indicate that worldwide minting production capacity is still unable to meet demand surges. I have been talking about this issue for some time, as in this July 2012 interview and here.

The 2008 global financial crisis did result in private and public mints expanding their production capacity. The Perth Mint, for example, has spent over $50m since 2008 on improvements to existing machinery as well as new and expanded facilities.

However, it is little appreciated that the bottleneck in the global coin minting process is blank (planchet) manufacture. This is a far more complex process than simple stamping of a coin, particularly around purity and accurate weight control. As a result, blank manufacture is a process that benefits from economies of scale and thus few mints these days make their own blanks, outsourcing the process to a limited number of private and public suppliers, of which the Perth Mint is one.

If you dig deep, you will find that many of the coin supply problems come from underestimation of demand and the resulting exhausting of blank inventories. Often, blank suppliers are mints themselves and can face conflicts where they earn more by prioritising blanks for internal use rather than supply externally. Running higher blank inventories is often not an option, due to the cost of funding the high dollar value of the inventory.

To get an idea of how high coin premiums can go when coin demand overwhelms production capacity, consider this chart from Nick at www.sharelynx.com


The 2008 premiums were celebrated by some at that time as a proof of a physical-paper price disconnect and a "good thing". The fact is that there was plenty of supply of the raw gold or silver (the Perth Mint at one stage was shipping in 20 tonnes of silver each week for weeks on end from London with no problems). High premiums are actually not a good thing, because it means that the same money buys (and takes off the market) less ounces.
Notwithstanding the capacity expansion by blank suppliers over the past five years, in my opinion there is no way the industry can meet the demand that would occur were precious metals to see even a small bit of interest from the mass market. While cast bars are a lot easier to make and refiners are much more casting production capacity, I am not even sure if it could meet sustained mass market demand.

For now 2008 style shortages and rationing don't seem to be on the horizon but the fact that the UK and US Mint are having supply issues on a few of their product with metal prices at these low levels is an idicator that as prices rise and (re)attract investor interest, shortages and rationing may become a reality of coin buying life again.
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I've not seen a shortage of raw gold since I've been in this business, but that is not say it will not happen in the future. Technically, price will solve any shortage.

The domestic cash for gold stuff is small, we have always refined tonnes of scrap gold from the Asian region.
Happy New Year Bron, and jugging by the start, it promises to be a busy one.
Please let me summarize crucial points of your text, and please correct me if I'm wrong:
- there's plenty of row/scarp PMs around
- all the shortage is due to blank manufacturing bottlenecks
- there's no shortage in Perth, in manufacturing or storage
- you guys, having future demand in mind, have updated production and are completely unaffected
- despite all that, shortages will occur (in Perth too), but only due to demand, not due to shortages in
raw material

After this report it becomes obvious that it is not actual PMs that are misspriced. It is blanks. I suggest
you should increase the price, or stop supplying those other loosers.
BTW when did you guys started buying scrap from general public? I only recently became aware of that,
after running into your adds calling on people to get rid of their old useless jewelry.
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I've not seen a shortage of raw gold since I've been in this business, but that is not say it will not happen in the future. Technically, price will solve any shortage. The domestic cash for gold stuff is small, we have always refined tonnes of scrap go  Lire la suite
Bron Suchecki - 13/01/2014 à 05:28 GMT
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