U.S. MINT SEPTEMBER SALES: 134 Times More Silver Eagles Sold Than Gold Eagles

With the enormous investor demand for Silver Eagles, the U.S. Mint sold nearly three million official coins in September.  While this wasn’t the highest monthly amount this year, it was a record when we compare the Silver Eagle sales to Gold Eagles.  And, it seems that U.S. citizens are purchasing the majority of the Silver Eagles as Americans prefer silver bullion coins (and rounds) over bars.

For those who might be new to the precious metals market, the official coins such as Silver Eagles, Maples, Philharmonics, Krugerrands, Kangaroos, Britannias, Pandas, and Libertads are known as “COINS.” In contrast, private rounds such as Buffalos, Walking Liberty, etc are labeled as “ROUNDS.”

While some investors prefer the Silver Maples because they have a better fineness (99.99% silver) versus the Silver Eagles (99.9% silver), there has been one heck of a lot more Silver Eagles sold and held in the market than Maples.  I don’t have a total Silver Maple Leaf coin figure because the Royal Canadian Mint stopped providing updates since 2015 on the amount of Gold & Silver Maples sold.

Regardless, here is an updated chart of the total Silver Eagles sold to date since 1986.

A total of 556 million Silver Eagles and 23.8 million Gold Eagles were sold from 1986 to September 2020.  That’s a half-billion oz of Silver Eagles sold since the U.S. Mint began producing them in 1986.  The ratio of total Silver Eagles to Gold Eagles over the 35 years was 23/1.  However, if we look at the ratio for September this year, it’s considerably higher.

The U.S. Mint sold 2,958,500 Silver Eagles and 22,000 oz of Gold Eagles during September.  Thus, the ratio was 134 times more Silver Eagles than Gold Eagles.  The average ratio over the 2016-2019 period was 64/1.

Here is the table from the U.S. Mint website on the total Gold Eagle coins (different denominations) and Silver Eagles for each month:

The 1 oz Gold Eagles (571,000 coins) accounted for 87% of the total 652,500 troy oz.  With total Silver Eagles at 21.1 million, it will be interesting to see if the final count reaches 25 million by the end of the year.

Regardless, there is a half-billion oz of Silver Eagles held mostly by Americans.  I can assure you, those who own Silver Eagles will be glad they protected wealth in these high-quality silver bullion coins.

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6 Comments on "U.S. MINT SEPTEMBER SALES: 134 Times More Silver Eagles Sold Than Gold Eagles"

  1. DisappearingCulture | October 5, 2020 at 3:48 pm |

    “I can assure you, those who own Silver Eagles will be glad they protected wealth in these high-quality silver bullion coins.”

    As will anyone owning .999 or .9999 fine bars, rounds, or other Sovereign coins. And 90% pre-1965 silver coins.

    • Well Steve seems to me that the locked down broken masses can’t come up with $2100 or so, to get a GOLD Eagle. Kicker is, those that don’t will wish they had. AU going up is a forgone conclusion….and it’ll drag SILVER up too…way up. For a lot of reasons….don’t look now……but here comes SILVER!

      • DisappearingCulture | October 6, 2020 at 10:55 am |

        In recent history I’ve heard less mention of gold’s price “dragging up” silver’s price, but it has, does, and will.

        Maybe one day silver will have an attraction of its own. I suspect that will be necessary for G to S ratios going below 40 to 1.

        • If I was a betting man I’d bet one golden eagle that we will see 10 to 1 G to S ratio at least once before the end of the decade.

          • DisappearingCulture | October 7, 2020 at 11:26 am |

            If it does wise people should exchange some [or most] of their silver for gold, as silver is volatile, and below 25 to 1 is unlikely to last.

  2. Hey Steve great job.
    Many say silver will be the investment of the decade. They´re wrong. The best investment of the decade is 25$ bucks monthly for this treasure trove of information on everything metal related.
    Thank you again!

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