Stack’s Bowers Galleries

Melt Value Calculator

This page is intended for melt value purposes only. Coins are often valued based on their date, mintmark, condition and other factors. The values shown here represent the silver or gold value of a coin, and not their potential market value. To learn more about the actual value of a coin you own, please contact our experts at info@stacksbowers.com.

Gold, the soft, lustrous, yellow precious metal, has been sought and treasured by humankind since ancient times. The Greeks found it in riverbeds in Asia Minor and used it to craft some of the world’s first coins, those struck more than 2,600 years ago by King Croesus of Lydia.

The Egyptians brought gold down the Nile from Nubia, and both the Roman and Byzantine empires struck magnificent gold coins that are prized by today’s collectors. Across the Atlantic, the ancient American Indian civilizations of Mexico, Peru, and Colombia fashioned exquisite ornaments from the yellow metal they called the Tears of the Sun.

Gold coinage returned to Western Europe in the late Middle Ages with great international coins called the Florin and Ducat. For centuries, governments and peoples have esteemed gold as a universal store of value, a primary source of portable wealth, the gleaming standard against which the value of all other things could be reliably measured.

The supply of gold is limited, and no more than 200,000 tons of the precious metal have been produced in all human history. A single cube measuring 69 feet on one side would contain all the gold ever mined. Demand for gold has steadily increased in recent years for jewelry, coinage, electronics, and dentistry. Although production has increased, demand has always outstripped it and gold is as rare today as ever.

Leading nations abandoned gold coinage after the First World War, but the revolution, runaway inflation, economic and political upheavals that followed reinforces gold’s importance in the economic discipline of governments. Today, as in past years, “as good as gold” holds true for governments as well as individuals.

Today, gold coins are in demand all over the world. Classic older issues, modern commemoratives, and newer bullion gold coins are eagerly sought by collectors and investors. Older issues generally offer a numismatic premium as recognized collectibles. Modern bullion coins provide a convenient method of acquiring gold in standardized Troy ounces and fractions. Gold coins make unique and highly treasured gifts as well as valuable additions to a collection or portfolio.

Stack’s Bowers Galleries offers a wide selection of United States and world gold coins, enumerated below, each with detailed specifications listed below the coin. We invited you to look through these coins, and we would be happy to answer any questions you may have.

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Gold Bars and Ingots

Gold bars offer the greatest variety of sizes and shapes to fit every budget. Minted in amounts from 1 gram to 1 kilogram or more, gold bars are a convenient and affordable way to invest in gold, and are generally traded at lower premiums than gold coins. Most gold bars are produced by reputable private refineries, such as Engelhard, Johnson Matthey, PAMP Suisse or Valcambi. There are a handful of government mints that produce gold bars as well. All gold bars will be stamped with their fineness and the weight of the bar in troy ounces or grams.

Gold bars are normally limited in their design alterations. Since gold bars are intended for investment purposes, rather than collections, the designs do not change from year to year. However, there are still some interesting bars that have been produced. Take for example the CombiBars produced by Valcambi. These bars begin as 1 ounce or 50 gram gold bars. They are divided into individual 1/10 ounce or 1 gram bars so that the buyer can break off increments as needed and therefore subdivide the bar into smaller units. PAMP Suisse produces a similar item.

While it is not typical, there are government mints that produce gold bars. Most gold bars, whether produced by a refiner or a government mint, will be of the utmost purity: 0.9999 fine.

Stack’s Bowers Galleries is happy to help you begin your bullion journey. If you would like to talk to a representative about purchasing gold, email us at info@stacksbowers.com.

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Download or View Stack’s Bowers Galleries Gold Bullion Brochure

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West Coast Office • (800) 458-4646

Midwest Office • (800) 817-2646

East Coast Office • (800) 566-2580

info@stacksbowers.com
 

Hong Kong, China Office • +852 2117 1191

infohk@stacksbowers.com
 

Copenhagen, Denmark • +45 80 40 49 42

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