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US Mint Running Out of Silver


Tarek Saab is an September 9th, 2010
entrepreneur,
TrustedBullion.com
speaker, and
nationally
syndicated
author. More
In Title 31 of the US Code, the United States Mint is required by law to supply
"in quantities sufficient to meet public demand, one dollar silver bullion coins of
specified size, weight, and design." (Source) This law is widely referenced, and
I have criticized the US Mint in the past when it fails to meet consumer demand
because of poor planning, despite the availability of silver.
DOMESTIC SILVER SUPPLY
However, there is an incredible amount of confusion about a second law which allegedly states that the US
Mint must supply its silver "blanks" from domestic resources. At present, two of these resources are the
Sunshine Mint and Stern-Leach. On June 5th, 2008, during the first massive Silver Eagle shortage, the
director of the US Mint published the following statement:

"By law, the United States Mint's American Eagle silver bullion coins must meet exacting specifications
andmust be composed of newly mined silver acquired from domestic sources. The United States Mint
will continue to make every effort to increase its acquisition of silver bullion blanks that meet these
specifications and requirements to address continuing high demand in the silver bullion coin
market." (Source)

This interpretation of the law is extremely relevant because Silver American Eagle sales are now on the
verge of surpassing total domestic silver mine production.

*2010 data assumes flat domestic silver production from 2009 YoY. Silver Eagles sales figures are linear estimates based
on 23.6M coins sold through August 2010, with no market assumptions. Sources Silver Production: USGS.gov Silver
Eagle Sales:USMINT.gov
WHAT DOES THE LAW ACTUALLY SAY?
However, many contend that the 'domestic supply' law doesn't actually exist for silver, but has been
confused with a different law on the books for gold, PUBLIC LAW 99-185—DEC. 17, 1985 99 STAT. 1179.
“(4) The Secretary shall acquire gold for the coins issued under section 5112(i) of this title by purchase of
gold mined from natural deposits in the United States, or in a territory or possession of the United
States, within one year after the month in which the ore from which it is derived was mined."

There is no mention of silver in this law. In fact, the only mention we found for silver supply chain
requirements comes from Title 31 U.S.C. § 5112 : US Code - Section 5112: Denominations, specifications,
and design of coins:

"(C) Sources of bullion. - The Secretary shall obtain silver for minting coins under subparagraph (B)
fromavailable resources, including stockpiles established under the Strategic and Critical Materials Stock
Piling Act."

With respect to the law on the books for gold, the phrase "available resources" is somewhat ambiguous. Are
there any qualifiers to an "available resource"?

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This ambiguity is so serious that in 2002 Representative Frank Lucas of Oklahoma proposed the Silver
Eagle Coin Continuation Act of 2002 (H.R. 4846) to the House of Representatives "to amend title 31,
United States Code, to clarify the sources of silver for bullion coins, and for other purposes."

On June 25, 2002, this bill passed the house by a count of 417 Ayes to 1 No (16 Abstain) and moved onto
the Senate as S. 2594 [107th]: Support of American Eagle Silver Bullion Program Act.
However, the Senate referred this legislation to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs,
where it has since remained, and has never been signed into law.

So where does that leave the situation? It apparently leaves us with an ambiguous law that is open to
interpretation by the only party with the authority to make one - the Treasury Department.
We will discover the ramifications soon enough. If the United States Mint decides not to source in the open
market or tap into strategic reserves, the data would indicate that there will be extreme domestic shortages.
If they do decide to source from the open market, well, who knows? . . . What happens when the US Mint
begins buying physical bullion on the open market?

'Til next time, that's my Saab Story.

Tarek Saab is a former finalist on NBC's "The Apprentice" with Donald Trump. He is an international
speaker, syndicated author, entrepreneur, and a managing partner at Trusted Bullion.

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