1999-W 5 DOLLARS
GOLD BULLION COINS - Unfinished Dies
PCGS No: 99940
Mintage: Unknown (estimated
1,000)
Notes:
In 1999, the Mint at West Point,
New York accidentally produced what may become one of the most important
rarities of the 20th Century by striking a limited quantity of
Uncirculated 1/10 ounce American Eagle gold coins with the "W"
mintmark below the date. Normally, the mintmark appears
only on Proof versions. However, in this case, the dies never
received the special polishing that gives Proof coins their deep,
mirror-like qualities. No one knows exactly how many were struck,
but experts estimate that only 500-1000 examples have been found since the
mistake was first discovered in 2000.
How did the Unfinished Die
1/10 ounce American Eagle gold coin come about? The answer comes
from examining how the Proof versions are created. Proof coins are
struck on special, high-quality presses using specially prepared blanks
(planchets) and specially prepared dies. The emphasis is on quality
over quantity and the goal is a coin with bright, mirror-like fields
surrounding frosty design elements, thus creating what is known as a
"cameo" effect. Special care is taken throughout the
process to ensure that the final product (the coin) is as perfect as
possible. This special care automatically limits production -- in
1999, the Mint at West Point produced only 19,919 Proof 1/10 ounce
American Eagle gold coins.
On the other hand, the
production of Uncirculated examples focuses more on quantity than quality
(although the final coin is still impressive enough). The number of
coins produced is limited only by the availability of gold bullion, by
estimated demand for the coins, and by other production priorities -- in
1999, the Mint at West Point produced 2,750,338 Uncirculated 1/10 ounce
American Eagle gold coins.
Using the numbers just
listed, we see that more than 138 Uncirculated coins were produced for
every Proof example, highlighting the relationship between quality and
quantity.
Great care is taken to
segregate the Proof production area and all of the materials used in it.
The fact that a die originally marked for use in the production of Proof
coins somehow made it into a press used to strike Uncirculated coins is
simply amazing. Proof dies are carefully accounted for...how did
this one escape? Press operators carefully scrutinize the dies
before they are placed in the presses...how did the operator miss the
mintmark on this one? Random coins from production runs are examined
for quality control...how did they miss the mintmark? The very
existence of the Unfinished Die 1/4 ounce American Eagle gold coins seems
to have required several lapses in quality control.
How rare will Unfinished Die
1/10 ounce American Eagle gold coins turn out to be? A lot depends
on how quickly the error was discovered at the Mint and how many actually
escaped. Did the press operator notice the mintmark and stop the
run? If the error was discovered, was an attempt made to recover and
destroy the coins that had already been minted? Even if we knew the
answers to these questions, we may never know the exact number of
Unfinished Die coins that were struck. But, we do know that after a
year of intense searching for these rarities, surprisingly few have shown
up.
What are they worth?
Recent sales have occurred in the $500-1,000 range. If the rarity
holds, these coins have every chance of being as valuable as the much more
common 1995-W Proof $1 Silver Eagle (currently priced at $3,200 in
Proof-69).
PCGS has graded less than
500 of these "Unfinished Die" coins, with the majority of them
appearing in the MS-69 grade.
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Images
courtesy of
Recent appearances:
NGC MS-70. Ex
– American Numismatic Rarities, LLC’s “The Classics Sale,”
July 25, 2003
, Lot
614, "Struck from unfinished Proof dies; fully lustrous golden yellow
with a frosty, matte-like appearance", illustrated, sold for
$1,265.00
Sources and/or recommended
reading:
"The PCGS Population Report, January 2002" by The
Professional Coin Grading Service
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