Gold, Silver Advance; US Mint Bullion Coin Sales Surge

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Gold Eagle coins
Gold and silver gained Wednesday as platinum and palladium fell. Also rising were sales of US Mint bullion coins.

Gold and silver futures climbed Wednesday, halting a two-session slide. The precious metals gained support as the U.S. dollar and stocks weakened and on reports of strong physical demand.

Gold for June delivery advanced $12.40, or 0.9%, to settle at $1,391.30 an ounce on the Comex in New York. Gold traded from an intraday low of $1,379.10 to a high of $1,393.80. The precious metal lost $7.70, or 0.6%, on Tuesday.

"Gold remains generally consolidative, underpinned by a weaker dollar and a retreat in stocks today and continued evidence of strong physical interest in Asia," MarketWatch quoted Peter Grant, chief market analyst at USAGold.

Reported widely in the news today, the World Gold Council noted strong physical buying in India and China.

"Gold is surging toward $1,400 again, as the World Gold Council opined today about record demand from Asia offsetting ETF liquidations," Dave Lutz, the head of exchange-traded fund trading and strategy at Stifel Nicolaus & Co. in Baltimore, said in an e-mailed according to Bloomberg.

Silver for July delivery gained 26.0 cents, or 1.2%, to finish at $22.453 an ounce. Prices ranged from $22.13 to $22.47. In the previous session, silver fell 30.3 cents or 1.4%.

PGM’s moved lower after snapping a two-day losing streak in the previous session. In their daily breakdowns:

  • July platinum shed $8.80, or 0.6%, to $1,453.00 an ounce, trading between $1,451.40 and $1,468.00. Platinum gained $9.90, or 0.7%, on Tuesday.

  • Palladium for September delivery, now the new most-active contract, declined $9.45, or 1.2%, to $750.10 an ounce. It ranged from $747.25 to $758.80. In the prior session, palladium for June delivery surged $30.55, or 4.2%.

London Fix Precious Metals

London precious metals fixings were unchanged to higher. In contrasting the Tuesday PM to Wednesday PM London Fix prices:

  • Gold added $6.00, or 0.4%, to $1,382.50 an ounce,
  • Silver was unchanged at $22.36 an ounce,
  • Platinum gained $5.00, or 0.3%, to $1,455.00 an ounce, and
  • Palladium jumped $14.00, or 1.9%, to $747.00 an ounce

US Bullion Coin Sales in May

Sales jumped for U.S. Mint bullion coins, supported by the return of $5 Gold Eagles with dealers ordering 50,000. Across the bullion spectrum, U.S. Mint sales for gold coins climbed 7,500 ounces and silver coins surged 846,000 ounces.

In the notable column, American Silver Eagles leapt over 3.4 million for the month and 21.7 million for the year. For the latter, that has never happened so soon. In 2011 when annual Silver Eagle sales hit a record of nearly 40 million, it took until June 27 to surpass the level. Last year, the bullion coins did not top the mark until August 24.

The following are daily, May and year-to-date bullion coin totals as published by the United States Mint.

American Eagle and Buffalo Bullion Coin Sales
  Wednesday Sales Last Week Week-To-Date May Sales YTD Sales
$50 American Eagle Gold Bullion Coins 2,000 7,000 4,000 54,000 488,000
$25 American Eagle Gold Bullion Coins 0 0 0 2,000 42,000
$10 American Eagle Gold Bullion Coins 2,000 0 2,000 6,000 78,000
$5 American Eagle Gold Bullion Coins 50,000 0 50,000 50,000 350,000
$50 American Buffalo Gold Bullion Coins 0 2,000 1,500 12,500 144,500
White Mountain 5 oz. Silver Bullion Coins 2,500 10,600 2,500 25,800 25,800
American Eagle Silver Coins 833,500 866,500 858,500 3,458,500 21,768,500

 

Figures above are in the number of coins sold, not in ounces.

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Legend

Herd mentality. Remember the card glut of the 1990’s? Those cards are ten billion for a dime now. With 21 million 2013 Eagle “ingots” sold and counting, what will the prices for them be in one month? One Year? You get the gist. However, paying 22 bucks a pop for an exquisite piece of true art…. priceless. And mind you, the silver and gold dip we just had will be stripped clean by the profits yielded to speculators who are in the market in a big way now. And these ain’t no cardboard, boys and girls. Buy now. Have good… Read more »