Mark Twain Silver Dollar Sales at 43,600

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In roughly three days, sales of the new proof and uncirculated 2016-P Mark Twain Commemorative Silver Dollars totaled 43,600 coins, or 12.5% of their maximum 350,000.

Mark Twain Silver Dollars in Cases-a
Proof and uncirculated Mark Twain Silver Dollars in their presentation cases

The proof with its unique degrees of frosting is outselling the other silver dollar with its standard uncirculated finish by 2.6-to-1, having sales splits of 31,500 and 12,100. Released on Monday, the two commemorative coins are available at introductory prices of $45.95 and $44.95.

Mark Twain Gold Coins have been available since mid-January. (See photos of the two gold coins and the proof’s three levels of frosting.) Costlier at $376.15 for the proof and $371.15 for the uncirculated, their resultantly moving slower with respective weekly gains of 521 and 241 for new sales splits of 7,953 and 3,759 — a ratio of 2.1-to-1. Their combined sales of 11,712 coins represent 11.7% of their maximum 100,000.

A week ago Wednesday, Jan. 27, prices of each gold coin went up $12.15 in response to a rising gold market. Their prices will climb by the same amount next Wednesday, Feb. 10, if gold continues to stay above $1,150 an ounce.

Order Mark Twain coins from the U.S. Mint’s online section of commemoratives or call 1-800-USA-MINT (872-6468).

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jim

I continue to wonder why they still make uncirculated coins since the cost difference for the gold coins is only $5 or less than 1.4% and $1 or a little over 2% for the silver coins. Or for that matter why people even buy the uncirculated coins considering the cost and aesthetic differences.

Two Cents

Jim, The short answer is that as long as people buy both proof and uncirculated versions of the same commemorative, the US Mint will continue to sell both. The long answer is that it’s traditional — in the past, and I mean from the very beginning of US coinage, proofs were minted as representations of circulating coins for presentation purposes (and later for well-heeled collectors). The US Mint continues that tradition of issuing proof coins and the coins that they represent in unc. condition. Proof coins were not always available to the general public — sometimes you had to be… Read more »

jim

Two Cents –
Thanks for responding. I think some people buy the uncirculated coins just because they’re available and not because they’re building an uncirculated collection. Regardless I think the proof coin is a refinement of the uncirculated coin and the mint will always start out with an uncirculated die and then polish and refine into a proof die. Consequently there will always be uncirculated dies and coins made.

RonnieBGood

Hi Jim.
My 3-cents worth (there was a 3 cent coin when stamps cost 3 cents each. lol). The only reason I have ever purchased an uncirculated version of a minting was due the lower coin mintage. In most cases a much lower mintage. I believe that this again will be the case with the uncirculated Mark Twain issue (due to the “special” triple finish proof) in both Gold and Silver.

With the recent instability of the stock market both Gold and Silver coins have again begun to spark the interest of investors.

Tommy2coins

I love proofs but know the uc coins usually have a much lower mintage. Because I also consider my enjoyment of numismatic endeavors a long term investment, I usually purchase the uc versions. If I had the bucks I would get both, but IMHO the lower mintages will pay off.

jim

T2c –
I know the unc’s usually have a lower mintage and the goal is to get the rarer coins but has that paid off any over time?
The spouse coins have turned into real duds so that even the proof coins have mintages in the low 3,000’s or less. Do you think the unc’s will have more value even when their mintages are only 700-800 fewer?