Silver Institute: Coin demand forces five major mints to restrict supply

The following is an edited summary report from the Washington D.C.-based Silver Institute. For more information please visit www.silverinstitute.org.

Retail investors in recent months have been stocking up on silver bullion coins and, to a lesser extent, bars. Due to strong demand, the U.S. Mint, the Royal Canadian Mint, Australia’s Perth Mint, the Austrian Mint and the British Royal Mint have put their silver bullion coins on allocation, where the volume of distribution of coins is controlled due to bottlenecks in the manufacturing process. This is an unprecedented industry-wide phenomenon. In recent history, putting bullion coins on allocation has only occasionally been done by the U.S. Mint. The practice points to considerable tightness in the silver coin business at the moment.

Globally, silver bullion coin sales reached an all-time high of 32.9 million oz. in this year’s third quarter, according to GFMS Thomson Reuters data. This volume was a 74% quarter-on-quarter and 95% year-on-year increase. Sales in North America, Europe, Japan and other Asian countries (mostly China) saw quarter-on-quarter growth of 74%, 72%, 95% and 202%.

As a result, lead times for silver coins have been stretched from immediate delivery to three to four weeks in some cases. This is an unusual occurrence in the industry, with several dealers stating this is the first time they have experienced lag times for certain coin products.  Additionally, the shortage is apparently both a supply and demand issue. 

While demand is strong, given the slow global economic outlook and attractive silver price, the mints are finding it hard to source the blanks needed to produce the coins.

“It is clear that investors are continuing to demonstrate their desire for silver bullion coins, and we encourage national mints across the globe to examine their manufacturing pipeline to ensure that this strong demand is met with immediate fulfillment,” executive director of the Silver Institute Michael DiRienzo said.

Silver bars are also experiencing a slight shortage, although confined to bars under 100 oz. — specifically 1 oz. and 10 oz. bars. Delivery times have increased from immediate to a 10-day delay in the most extreme cases, especially in the U.S. and Canada. The increase in demand in recent months has been driven by bargain buying, particularly after prices fell below US$15 per oz. Demand buoyed when prices reverted back above US$15 per oz., however, as shortages in products spurred investor interest in the white metal. 

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