Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Mint cuts silver, gold coin supply

- By Justina Vasquez and Yvonne Yue Li

The U.S. Mint has reduced the volume of gold and silver coins it’s distributi­ng to authorized purchasers as the coronaviru­s pandemic slows production, a document seen by Bloomberg shows.

The Mint’s West Point complex in New York is taking measures to prevent the virus from spreading among its employees, and that will probably slow coin production for the next 12 to 18 months, the document shows. The facility can no longer produce gold and silver coins at the same time,

forcing it to choose one metal over the other, according to the document, which was presented to companies authorized to buy coins from the Mint last week.

The West Point facility is one of the primary sites for bullion production, along with the San Francisco complex, which only partially reopened in May after shutting down earlier in the year. During the 2019 fiscal year, the U.S. Mint overall produced 18.8 million ounces of bullion, according to its most recent annual report.

A spokesman for the Mint didn’t immediatel­y comment.

“The pandemic created a whole new set of challenges for us to manage,” the Mint said in the document. “We believe that this environmen­t is going to continue to lead to some degree of reduced capacity as West Point struggles to balance employee safety against market demand.”

The U.S. Mint — which makes gold, silver, platinum and palladium coins that are sold through a network of distributo­rs — has been producing commemorat­ive and investment coins at a lower capacity since reopening the West Point facility and imposing social distancing earlier this year.

The cuts are yet another blow the pandemic has dealt to America’s coin supplies. Just last week, the Mint urged Americans to spend pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters because the pandemic has cut in-store sales purchases and slowed the pace of coin circulatio­n nationwide.

The reduced allocation­s are also coming just as investors are clamoring for precious coins. Global uncertaint­y over the pandemic has driven silver and gold prices to multiyear highs, turning coins made from the metals into a retail safe haven. The premiums for some coins over the spot prices of the metals have surged to record levels.

To cope with demand, the Mint is now asking dealers to provide their 10day and 90-day forecasts for demand for the first time ever.

That will allow it to decide what products to make as some are more labor-intensive than others, according to the document. If the Mint decides to make one-tenth of an ounce of gold, for instance, it must cut production of American Eagle Silver coins.

 ?? Scott Eells/Bloomberg ?? One-ounce silver Liberty coins at the United States Mint at West Point, N.Y., in 2013.
Scott Eells/Bloomberg One-ounce silver Liberty coins at the United States Mint at West Point, N.Y., in 2013.

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