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Mint Considering Change to .999 Silver Comp

From CW 2 minutes ago...
Switching from a .900 fine silver composition to .999 fine silver in the U.S. Mint's annual Silver Proof sets would save the Mint money, officials say.
Mint officials are proposing that the dime, quarter dollar and half dollar in the various annual Silver Proof sets be made of .999 fine silver rather than the current alloy of 90 percent silver and 10 percent copper. The .900 fine silver, though long used in the United States, is nonstandard for the rest of the world and for the suppliers of silver planchets to the U.S. Mint.
Switching from a .900 fine silver composition to .999 fine silver in the U.S. Mint's annual Silver Proof sets would save the Mint money, officials say.
Mint officials are proposing that the dime, quarter dollar and half dollar in the various annual Silver Proof sets be made of .999 fine silver rather than the current alloy of 90 percent silver and 10 percent copper. The .900 fine silver, though long used in the United States, is nonstandard for the rest of the world and for the suppliers of silver planchets to the U.S. Mint.
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Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
Now can it get passed the elected officials is the question?
Then it would be true silver proof set.
Can we then safely assume that if the Mint raises the silver from .900 to .999 finn the Mint will then LOWER the price of the product?
If you believe this, I have some land off the coast of Florida to sell you.......
Oh, by the way, this will apply to the (currently) .900 fine silver dollar commemoratives as well!
<< <i>I would like to see them produce all coins in the silver proof set out of silver, even the cent, nickel and dollar coins.
Then it would be true silver proof set. >>
Now that would put a wrinkle in collecting.
<< <i>How 'bout limiting proof sets to 200,000 mintage. That would save money plus reawaken collectors >>
Exactly.
<< <i>They had better change the inserts and packaging of the proof sets to something more inert if they do this. I would think the current cardboard they use is rather "ert" and would blacken a .999 silver proof set in short order. >>
the inserts that hold the coins are currently colored plastic.
They changed 2 or 3 years ago.
<< <i>I assume this will also change the size/diameter of the coins? Won't that require all the packaging to be re-sized too? >>
change the size ??
why?
these are quarters, dimes, and half dollars (plus the comemmoratives) why would there be two different sizes of half dollars? They aren't minting by weight. They are saying it would be cheaper to purchase .999 fine over .90 fine because the planchet suppliers have to do .90 fine special for the mint. So the suppliers charge more for the special runs.
I would assume they'd simply include the proper amount of the newly composed silver alloy and keep the coin the same size...and since you'd be getting a bit more silver, the price would probably either stay the same or go up a bit.
Perhaps the finished weight of the coin might be a bit different, however.
Agreed...so don't hope for a price reduction any time soon!
<< <i>This is being floated as a way for the Mint to save money.
Can we then safely assume that if the Mint raises the silver from .900 to .999 finn the Mint will then LOWER the price of the product?
If you believe this, I have some land off the coast of Florida to sell you.......
Oh, by the way, this will apply to the (currently) .900 fine silver dollar commemoratives as well! >>
Silver is worth considerably more than the copper it will be replacing and the value of the extra silver is no doubt more than they will be saving on purchased planchets so it is unrealistic to expect them to lower the price on a more expensive item. A 1000 ounce bar contains about $3500 more in metal content than a 1000 ounce bar of 90%.
<< <i>How 'bout limiting proof sets to 200,000 mintage. That would save money plus reawaken collectors >>
I am not sure how this makes sense. Lower mintage means more interest from
collectors or speculators?
if they made 5 million no one would want them.
there is a sweet spot for attracting interest while still making enough for people.
I'm not sure where that sweet spot would be.
However, if they were to intentionally under-mint... let's say the 50th anniversary SAE sets.... especially after the 25th set debacle.... there would be rioting in the collecting streets.
I would not want the Mint intentionally under-minting anything. ---> Mint to demand.
<< <i>This is being floated as a way for the Mint to save money.
Can we then safely assume that if the Mint raises the silver from .900 to .999 finn the Mint will then LOWER the price of the product? >>
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
<< <i>I would like to see them produce all coins in the silver proof set out of silver, even the cent, nickel and dollar coins.
Then it would be true silver proof set. >>
Canada and France do that, I know with the latter and Great Britain that they also do a few in gold too. I would not mind owning a set in all silver and perhaps gold.
<< <i>
<< <i>This is being floated as a way for the Mint to save money.
Can we then safely assume that if the Mint raises the silver from .900 to .999 finn the Mint will then LOWER the price of the product?
If you believe this, I have some land off the coast of Florida to sell you.......
Oh, by the way, this will apply to the (currently) .900 fine silver dollar commemoratives as well! >>
Silver is worth considerably more than the copper it will be replacing and the value of the extra silver is no doubt more than they will be saving on purchased planchets so it is unrealistic to expect them to lower the price on a more expensive item. A 1000 ounce bar contains about $3500 more in metal content than a 1000 ounce bar of 90%. >>
Who said they would be adding more silver? Probably same diameter and same silver content but they would just not add any copper alloy.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>This is being floated as a way for the Mint to save money.
Can we then safely assume that if the Mint raises the silver from .900 to .999 finn the Mint will then LOWER the price of the product?
If you believe this, I have some land off the coast of Florida to sell you.......
Oh, by the way, this will apply to the (currently) .900 fine silver dollar commemoratives as well! >>
Silver is worth considerably more than the copper it will be replacing and the value of the extra silver is no doubt more than they will be saving on purchased planchets so it is unrealistic to expect them to lower the price on a more expensive item. A 1000 ounce bar contains about $3500 more in metal content than a 1000 ounce bar of 90%. >>
Who said they would be adding more silver? Probably same diameter and same silver content but they would just not add any copper alloy. >>
They would then be slightly thinner and slightly lighter. Possible, but I think they keep all dimensions the same and up the wieght. We shall see.
The more qualities observed in a coin, the more desirable that coin becomes!
My Jefferson Nickel Collection
The supplier simply melts the coins down into new bars, which are rolled out into strip of the appropriate thicknesses and blanked. No refining is required.
So tell me again how the Mint can save money by raising the fineness?
TD