The US mint and a couple of foreign mints have announced they will not likely be able to meet the demand this year for gold and silver bullion products. This is an indicator of the demand for physical gold and silver.
I have been noticing the scarcity of supply plus an increased premium over spot on gold and silver coins on some of the major bullion dealers sites. That shows up in lots of categories sporatically and increasingly, where they have nothing available at all, and also a higher premium over spot for having gold or silver in coin form.
When silver was around $25. an ounce, you could buy rolls of dimes for around $105, but with only a 10% increase in spot, they are now over $150. (I did find one dealer with some rolls of brilliant uncirculated 1955 dimes still priced at $125 so I grabbed those). Canadian silver dollars then were $15, and with a 10% increase in spot, they have jumped over 30% to $20. US historic gold coins are now sometimes available in some categories and sometimes not, but historic European gold coins, with a lower premium over spot, have really disappeared. Belgian 20 francs of the late 19th century used to be commonly available at about $10 over spot, but not lately. Even the Habsburg era gold restrikes, which are still being struck by the Vienna mint, are increasingly hard to find (I like the 1915 restrike one ducat, which is .1107 ounce of gold but usually available at $20 cheaper than current US mint one tenth ounce bullion coins - more gold for less money, how can you beat that?).
The Reddit / Robinhood attack on a silver ETF has seemed to have spooked the market. What the bullion banks did to fight that has left the physical silver market very narrow on supply, and that momentum seems to have spilled over into gold.
I have been noticing the scarcity of supply plus an increased premium over spot on gold and silver coins on some of the major bullion dealers sites. That shows up in lots of categories sporatically and increasingly, where they have nothing available at all, and also a higher premium over spot for having gold or silver in coin form.
When silver was around $25. an ounce, you could buy rolls of dimes for around $105, but with only a 10% increase in spot, they are now over $150. (I did find one dealer with some rolls of brilliant uncirculated 1955 dimes still priced at $125 so I grabbed those). Canadian silver dollars then were $15, and with a 10% increase in spot, they have jumped over 30% to $20. US historic gold coins are now sometimes available in some categories and sometimes not, but historic European gold coins, with a lower premium over spot, have really disappeared. Belgian 20 francs of the late 19th century used to be commonly available at about $10 over spot, but not lately. Even the Habsburg era gold restrikes, which are still being struck by the Vienna mint, are increasingly hard to find (I like the 1915 restrike one ducat, which is .1107 ounce of gold but usually available at $20 cheaper than current US mint one tenth ounce bullion coins - more gold for less money, how can you beat that?).
The Reddit / Robinhood attack on a silver ETF has seemed to have spooked the market. What the bullion banks did to fight that has left the physical silver market very narrow on supply, and that momentum seems to have spilled over into gold.
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