Four New Tails

The US Mint held a ceremony at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool to unveil the four new reverse designs for the 2009 Lincoln Cent.

The four reverse designs were part of the Presidential $1 Coin Act of 2005 (Public Law 109-145 [GPO: TEXT, PDF]) to celebrate the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial. The law calls for four reverse designs to honor Lincoln’s birth and early childhood in Kentucky, his formative years in Indiana, his professional life in Illinois, and his presidency in Washington, DC.

The obverse of the coin will continue to have the portrait of Abraham Lincoln that was designed by Victor David Brenner and first released in 1909.

New coin designs will be release quarterly with the Early Childhood reverse being released on February 12, 2009.

These new coins will circulate with the District of Columbia and United States Territorial Quarters. Additionally, do not forget the 2009 scheduled Presidential $1 Coins honoring William Henry Harrison (our 9th president), John Tyler (10th), James K. Polk (11th), and Zachary Taylor (12th).

Click image to enlarge.

Now This Is Good Common Cents

Last December, I reported on the Penny Harvest Field that was installed in the plaza at Rockefeller Center in New York City. The Penny Harvest Field was 165-foot long and 30-foot wide “box” filled with pennies. Pennies donated to school children from all over New York City.

I received a note this evening from Common Cents, the organizer of the Penny Harvest, to announce that last year’s harvest raised $677,955.99, including $20,000 from passers-by in Rockefeller Plaza.

The announcement went on to say:

This past December, millions of people from around the world witnessed the astonishing collective effort of hundreds of thousands of children. But, the story doesn’t end there. After the pennies left Rockefeller Center, Penny Harvesters got to work deciding how to reinvest these funds back into their communities. This year, we are pleased to announce that New York City Penny Harvesters made 1,513 community grants and performed 345 neighborhood service projects with their precious funds.

New York is certainly a better place to live because of the hard-work and compassion of these children.

We hope you will continue to support Common Cents’ efforts to teach children the importance of giving back, and work with us to build the next generation of informed, capable, and caring young people.

CONGRATULATIONS to Common Cents and the school children of New York City whose efforts should be applauded!

Are We Really In 2008?

Now that we are at the middle of May, I continue to check my pocket change and ask where are all of the 2008 coins? By now, I would expect to see a few 2008 coins in my change but I have seen only a few Oklahoma quarters in circulation. And even after the Bureau of Engraving and Printing said that the Federal Reserve would only circulate the new Series 2006 $5 notes for the first two weeks after issue, I have yet to receive from circulation.

I performed an unscientific survey of five co-workers who did not have a single 2008 coin amongst them.

Of all the 2008 coins I expected to see sooner was the Lincoln Cent. According the US Mint, the presses that strike cents in Philadelphia and Denver run 24 hours per day, seven days per week in order to supply the Federal Reserve with coinage to support the nation’s money supply. But where are they?

One theory was that floated that with the soft economy, people are bring jars and buckets of change to coin counting machines, placing hoarded coins back into circulation. Coinstar, whose kiosks are seen at many grocery stores, has been advertising for people to turn in their change. Those using Coinstar machines pay 8.9 percent for the service (9.5 percent in Canada) or customers can redeem their coins for gift cards with no fees.

Coinstar’s reported earnings for their coin counting operations have risen. In an attempt to jump on the “green” bandwagon, Coinstar is promoting the environmental savings that can be realized by recycling coins. They are promoting it with a website at ChangeForYourEarth.com.

With some banks offering free coin counting services, Coinstar promoting coin services as a green initiative, and the slowing economy lowering the demand for coinage seems to have lead to a reduction in striking cents.

Hopefully I will find a 2008 coin soon.

Polymer, Gold, and Steel

It has been a week since my last post and I thought an update was in order. I will follow up with a post for some of these at another time. This will give me something to do while proctoring the final exam in an information security course I am teaching this semester.

I recently received four polymer 20 New Israeli Shekelim notes from a dealer in Israel. These notes are the first that Israel is producing on polymer “paper” that was developed by the The Reserve Bank of Australia. Israel is another in the growing list of countries to start using the polymer material. The notes include the same security features as rag-based notes and include a new clear window with a watermark that is said to be extremely difficult to counterfeit. While the polymer substrate costs little more and the production is only marginally more expensive, the benefit will come from the reduction in counterfeiting and the durability of the note. Polymer will last three-to-six times longer than rag-based paper.

According to unconfirmed reports, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing is experimenting with different types of polymer paper for both US and foreign production. If the BEP can adjust their equipment to print on polymer paper, they can solicit business from other countries to produce their currency. Once the BEP builds its portfolio, they are prepared to go to congress to recommend discontinuing production of the one-dollar note. Until then, the BEP will continue to produce one-dollar notes in order to keep workers in key congressional districs in the Washington, DC and Fort Worth, TX areas employed. Remember, 95-percent of the BEP’s production are for one-dollar federal reserve notes.

The spot price of gold continues to drop as the dollar gains against the Euro and the Pound. Prices are returning to pre-2008 levels. However, buyers of gold collectors coins from the US Mint has not seen their prices reduced. While the Mint repriced gold and platinum coins in February and March, the Mint has not lowered their prices with the market. The one-ounce American Gold Eagle proof coin is still $1,199.95, the new price given in February. With gold closing at $876.88 today, the $327.07 premium is 36.8-percent higher than the spot price. This will cause problems for those who buy at thiese prices when reselling these coins.

While we are talking about gold, the Original Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle Ultra-High Relief Bullion Coin Act was simultaneously introduced in both the House (H.R. 5614) and Senate (S. 2924). These identical bills will allow the Mint to strike high-relief $20 gold pieces using the Augustus Saint-Gaudens original 1907 design. The date will be in roman numerals and the motto “In God We Trust” will be added over the rising sun as it appeared in 1908. The coin will be on a double-thick, 24-karat gold planchet (sometimes called a piefort) 27 millimeters in diameter.

The US Mint finally posted its online product schedule for the rest of the year. The only thing that jumps out at me is that the 2008 American Buffalo 24-karat gold proof coin is not listed.

On Tuesday, the House of Representatives began to debate H.R. 5512, the Coin Modernization and Taxpayer Savings Act of 2008. The primary provisions of the bill will allow the US Mint to determine the size and composition of US coins without having to ask congress for permission. It also specifies that following 2009, the one-cent coin would be “be produced primarily of steel and treated to impart a copper color to its appearance similar to one-cent coins produced of a copper-zinc alloy.” Debate was cut off on procedural grounds by Republican lawmakers who oppose the bill.

It was just another uneventful week!

About Lincoln’s 100 Year Old Cents

As the venerable Lincoln Cent marches to its one hundredth anniversary in 2009, there has been a lot of talk about the one year designs and whether the coin will continue its production in 2010. But we cannot forget that it is still the backbone of commerce.

The following video was made for the Boston Herald by Ted Ancher for a story he had written. The video is a narrated slide show talking about the Lincoln cent with the “Battle Hymn of the Republic” playing in the background on a loop. Enjoy!

Would You Pick Up A Penny From The Ground?

Sometimes, the debate on the value of our under appreciated zinc-coated-copper cent can get very passionate. While there are multiple sides to every story, we may forget the satire in all of the arguments.

As part of a similar discussion on the Collectors Society forums, we were introduced to this satyrical “scientific” answer to the question, Is a penny worth picking up?. It is a serious sounding, tongue-in-cheek look at what it would cost to pick up one of these coins laying on the ground.

As you read, please check the links in the article’s section titles!

It’s Sunday… we might as well have a little fun!

Paulson and Understanding Common Cents

History tells us that the first coinage legislation was devised primarily by Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton with Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson. These fathers of the United States understood that the new, struggling nation needed its own monetary system that had to be accepted by the public. The eventual law became the foundation of our monetary system.

When Hamilton decided a decimal coinage system was best, he was looking at how the people were using the Spanish Milled Dollar (8 reales) and cutting it up for minor coinage. The pieces were called “bits.” He also saw the continued circulation of British copper coins. The highest denomination circulated in the colonies was a sixpence since the king used the lower coinage in an attempt to control the populace. These coins were used a decimal fraction of the Milled Dollar. It was a natural progression.

Jefferson and Hamilton proposed new United States coins that would be used along side their British and Spanish counterparts until the country could produce enough coinage to drive the foreign coins out of circulation. Jefferson proposed that the new United States coins be similar in size to the coins in circulation. Thus the bill passed by the first congress included a half-cent as the same size of the half-pence, the one cent as the same size of the one penny, the half-disme was the same size as the threepence, and so on.

Hamilton pursued the minting of the half-cent because he felt that if the cent was the lowest denomination, the prices for common commodities would have to be raised. About the half-cent Hamilton said that to “enable the porrer classes to procure necessaries cheap, is to enable them, with more comfort to themselves, to labor for less; the advantages of which need no comment.” The half-cent was also necessary to replace the half-penny and provide change for the bit, which is one-eighth of a Milled Dollar.

The half-cent survived until the passage of the Coinage Act of 1857 which eliminated the half-cent, approved the minting of the small cent, and demonetize foreign coins circulating in the United States. Since the half-cent was not a popular coin, the economy adjusted and found that half-cent pricing was voluntarily eliminated Also, without the bit being legal tender, there was no longer a need to make half-cent change. Within a short time, a few years by some accounts, both the half-cent and large cent were no longer being circulated.

In the United States, we hold our founding fathers in reverence because of how their work has survived. While these men were not perfect, their wisdom and foresight has survived wars, crime, corruption, economic crises, and terrorism for over 200 years. It is a self-correcting system that was designed to grow with the nation. During this evolution, economic concerns and support for the poor have been paramount in economic policy.

This might have changed on February 29, 2009, when the current Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson told Spike O’Dell of WGN in Chicago that the penny should be eliminated saying, “The penny is worth less than any other currency.” Paulson, who can turn a phrase as well as his boss, also shows that he is out of touch with the rest of America when he said, “I walk around with very little cash in my pocket, like everyone else.”

Apparently Paulson, the former chairman of Goldman Sachs, does not venture far from his office at the Department of the Treasury into southeast Washington or into areas of northeast where lesser advantaged people live who do not have a pocket full of credit cards. And with credit issues being at the center of the current economic crises, it is irresponsible for the government’s leading financial manager to pitch pennies for those who have to pinch pennies.

Those who want to end the production of the cent says that cash payments would be rounded. But at whose advantage? When there was an issue with the half-cent, the market adjusted on its own. So when the coin was eliminated in 1857, there was almost no economic impact. However, prices are not rounded, sales taxes are calculated in fractions, and the coin is used many transactions.

The United States has been striking one-cent coins every year since 1793. It is the most common coin, yet has produced some legendary coins like the Large Cent, the 1856 Flying Eagle Cent, 1877 Indian Head Cent, the 1909-S VDB, and the king of all errors the 1955 Doubled Die Obverse.

While the elite like Paulson and Richard Safire never consider the person who driving their limousines, the rest of us worry about the impact on the economy and the injustice its removal from the market would bring. All they consider is that the rising price of zinc and the production process of the United States Mint, it costs 1.6-cents to strike one coin, which allegedly affects the taxpayer.

What they do not tell the public is that the US Mint does not receive any appropriations from the Treasury General Fund. All of the operations of the US Mint (and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing) are funded through the Public Enterprise Fund. The PEF is a special account where the profits from the sales of coins, called seignorage, are deposited. Whether the sale is to collectors, or to the Federal Reserve Bank branches who pay face value for the coins, the difference from the manufacturing process and the purchase is deposited in the PEF. When congress determines the budget for the US Mint, the money used is withdrawn from the PEF. Congress then uses the balance for other purposes.

The Mint and BEP are manufacturers of money that are profit making organizations, and they have a very good profit record—better than any top ranked company. They have become self-sustaining agencies with a financial record better than most other government agencies. Unfortunately, that does not enter the discussion of the detractors.

Another area the detractors discount is the good that can happen from the penny. Remember the Penny Harvest Field that was on display in December at Rockefeller Center in New York City? While the pennies are being counted for the 2007 effort, the 2006 project collected over $643,000 for New York area charities. For a coin that allegedly has little to no purchasing power, that is a lot of money to support good programs.

Many of us who started collecting at a young age would either rummage through our parents’ change or worked cutting grass, delivering newspapers, and other odd jobs where the payment helped fuel that passion. Pennies were easy. We would buy the ubiquitous blue Whitman Folders and try to fill the holes with what we find. It was an inexpensive way to start a collection and have some fun. Today, there are companies that bulk lots from hoards that can be searched to create a nice collection of circulated coins. It is the same principle accounting for the economic changes since I started collecting 38 years ago.

Whether you are a collector, investor, or concerned citizen, I urge you to consider all of the facts. While the Ruppert Murdock-owned Wall Street Journal mentions the near dormant Citizens for Retiring the Penny whose only argument is that pennies cost too much to make, organizations like Americans for Common Cents looks to educate people with carefully constructed and referenced facts.

As a collector and taxpaying citizen of the United States, I believe Paulson and his ilk are wrong and should not be in a position of power with an attitude he has shown. As I type this, he will be in his job no more than the next 319 days!

I will leave you with one last thought: If the cent is obsolete and economically infeasible with little buying power, then why is the Federal Reserve ordering so many for circulation?

60 Minutes on Minting Costs

CBS News’ ubiquitous weekly news magazine, 60 Minutes, broadcasted a report on Sunday that discussed the costs of producing cents and nickels (see embedded video below). According to the US Mint, over 8 billion copper-coated zinc cents were produced ($80 million) costing the Mint $134 million to produce. Producing 1.3 billion nickels ($65 million) made with the .75 copper alloy that has been in use since 1866, and cost $124 million.

Should We Make Cents?
Source: CBS News

Mint Director Edmund Moy, who was interviewed for the report by Morley Safer, said that the costs were a direct result of the rising metal prices. “You know, coins are made out of metal,” Moy said. “And worldwide demand for copper, nickel and zinc have dramatically increased over the last three years. That’s what’s primarily driving up the cost of making the penny and nickel,”

Stephen Dubner, the co-author of the bestseller Freakonomics, puts the penny in the same category as your appendix and other useless relics. “It’s just not useful,” Dubner said. Unfortunately, Dubner may not have heard that researchers may have found that the appendix does have a useful function.

The focus of the report was to look at the economics of continuing the production of Lincoln Cents. While the report mentioned the tradition of the cent and the coin features Abraham Lincoln, probably the country’s greatest president, and the 2009 redesign program, the argument about removing these coins from circulation are based on their economic worth. But if they are useless and have no value, then why is there a demand for these coins being produced?

I have previously explained that the Mint’s primary “is to produce an adequate volume of circulating coinage for the nation to conduct its trade and commerce.” To carry out this mission, the Mint distributes coins to the Federal Reserve System banks and branches as necessary. Regardless of the cost of production, is it really necessary for the Mint to produce so many cents for circulation?

Unlike commemorative or other collectible items, the number of business strike coins distributed is determined by the individual Federal Reserve banks. As the need arises, the Federal Reserve banks place orders with the Mint for coins to distribute to the nations banks. From those banks, coins are circulated to the public through business or teller operations. Although there are some stockpiles of under used coinage (mostly halves and dollars), the Mint uses “just-in-time” inventory management and distribution like many other manufacturing facilities. Thus, productions of business strikes are based on the demand created by the ordering practice of the various Federal Reserve banks.

If the cent is obsolete and economically infeasible with little buying power, then why is the Federal Reserve ordering so many for circulation?

How Cents are Made
Source: CBS News

Penny Harvest Field

NBC Nightly News treated its viewers to a story about the Penny Harvest Field, a 165-foot long and 30-foot wide “box” filled with over 100 million pennies. The Field was installed in the plaza at Rockefeller Center in New York City, opposite of the GE Building, the home of NBC, near the famous Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree and ice skating rink.

The Penny Harvest Field is a project of Common Cents, a New York City non-profit educational organization whose mission is to create and manage service-learning programs. The Penny Harvest Field us a year-long project that involved a reported half-million children from 770 New York City schools to teach the value of money and its power to do good regardless the size of the donation. It is a phenomenal effort to raise over $1 million for charitable organizations in New York.

People are encouraged to visit the Penny Harvest Field, add their own pennies, and run your hands through the coins. If you live in New York or plan to visit my hometown, bring your family, your children, and anyone else who wants to see how so little can add up to so much!

Flash video from The Penny Harvest at CommonCents.org.

CCAC Recommends 2009 Reverse Designs

The Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee met on September 25 to discuss the proposed reverse designs for the 2009 Lincoln cents. Enacted into law as part of the Presidential $1 Coin Act of 2005 (Public Law 109-145 [GPO: Text, PDF]), the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial 1-Cent Coin Redesign calls for four reverse designs to honor his birth and early childhood in Kentucky, his formative years in Indiana, his professional life in Illinois, and his presidency in Washington, DC.

According to reports, the CCAC decided on two reverse designs for each category. These recommendations will be sent to the Commission of Fine Arts for their decision. Remember, the selection by the CCAC is their consensus recommendations. The CFA can, and has, overruled the CCAC and has recommended redesigns of the recommendations. It is this bureaucracy that has produced the unfocused three-element reverse of the Florida quarter and the hanging astronaut on the Ohio quarter.

In the image to the right, the bottom two drawings were recommended for the design representing Lincoln’s birth and early childhood. The drawing on the upper-left is one of the recommendations for the design representing Lincoln’s formative years. The upper-right drawing is one of the recommended designs representing his professional life in Illinois. Without seeing the other designs, I am not sure what to think about them.

Although the CCAC is a government committee, obtaining the designs for public examination are difficult, if not elusive. Images are not published on the CCAC or CFA websites. The CCAC does make some of the images available to the media who chooses not to publish them. The image published here is from the Associated Press as published in the Journal Gazette of Fort Wayne, Indiana. I appreciate their publication of of this image. I will be sending a note to the CCAC requesting these images. Stay tuned!

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