Canadian Gold Maple Leaf
Value | 50.00 CAD (face value) |
---|---|
Mass | 31.11[1] g (1.00 troy oz) |
Diameter | 30 mm (1.181 in) |
Edge | Reeded |
Composition | Gold (99.99% Au) |
Years of minting | 1979–present |
Obverse | |
Design | Monarch of Canada |
Reverse | |
Design | Maple Leaf |
Design date | 1979 (2015) |
The Canadian Gold Maple Leaf (GML) is a gold bullion coin that is issued annually by the Government of Canada. It is produced by the Royal Canadian Mint.
The Gold Maple Leaf is legal tender with a face value of 50 Canadian dollars. The market value of the metal varies, depending on the spot price of gold. Having a .9999 millesimal fineness (24 karats), in some cases .99999, the coin is among the purest official bullion coins worldwide. The standard version has a weight of minimum 1 troy ounce (31.1 grams). Other sizes and denominations include: 1 gram, 1⁄25 oz. ($0.50), 1⁄20 oz. ($1), 1⁄10 oz. ($5), 1⁄4 oz. ($10) and 1⁄2 oz. ($20).
The Gold Maple Leaf's obverse and reverse display, respectively, the profile of Queen Elizabeth II of Canada and the Canadian Maple Leaf. In 2013 and 2015, new security features were introduced. In 2013, a laser-micro-engraved textured maple leaf was added on a small area of the reverse (Maple Leaf) side of the coin. In the centre of this mark is the numeral denoting the coin's year of issue, which is only visible under magnification. In 2015, the radial lines on the coin's background on both sides of the coin were added.
On 3 May 2007, the Royal Canadian Mint unveiled a Gold Maple Leaf coin with a nominal face value of $1 million and a metal value of over $3.5 million, referred to as a Big Maple Leaf.[2][3] It measures 50 cm in diameter by 3 cm thick and has a mass of 100 kg, with a purity of 99.999%. On 26 March 2017, one of the six pieces was stolen from the Berlin Bode Museum;[4] it has not been found as of 2021. It is assumed that it has been melted down for the gold.[5][6]
Information
[edit]The coin was introduced in 1979.[7][8] At the time the only competing bullion coins being minted were the Krugerrand (which was not widely available because of the economic boycott of apartheid-era South Africa) and the Austrian 100 Corona.[9] Coins minted between 1979 and 1982 have a fineness of .999.
Gold Maple Leaf
[edit]Years | Denominations | Purity | Obverse |
---|---|---|---|
1979–1982 | 1 oz. | .999 | 39-year-old Queen Elizabeth II |
November 1982 – 1985 | 1 oz., 1⁄4 oz., 1⁄10 oz. | .9999 | |
1986–1989 | 1 oz., 1⁄2 oz., 1⁄4 oz., 1⁄10 oz. | ||
1990–1992 | 64-year-old Queen | ||
1993 | 1 oz., 1⁄2 oz., 1⁄4 oz., 1⁄10 oz., 1⁄20 oz. | ||
1994 | 1 oz., 1⁄2 oz., 1⁄4 oz., 1⁄10 oz., 1⁄15 oz., 1⁄20 oz. | ||
1995–2004 | 1 oz., 1⁄2 oz., 1⁄4 oz., 1⁄10 oz., 1⁄20 oz. | ||
2005–2013 | 79-year-old Queen | ||
2014–2023 | 1 oz., 1⁄2 oz., 1⁄4 oz., 1⁄10 oz., 1⁄20 oz., 1 gram. | ||
2024-Present | King Charles III |
For .99999 ("Five Nines") Pure Gold Maple Leafs, see Special issues below.
The .9999 1982 Gold Maple Leafs began minting in November.[citation needed] Thus, most of the 1982 Gold Maple Leafs are .999 fine.
Production problems
[edit]Some dealers have complained about the production quality of the Gold Maples.[10][11][12]
Bimetallic Maple Leaf
[edit]As a way of commemorating 25 years as an industry leader in bullion coins, the Royal Canadian Mint created a unique six-coin set. mint.ca It was a new bimetallic maple leaf, set in bullion finish (a brilliant relief against a parallel lined background). The six-coin set was the first to include the 1⁄25 oz Maple Leaf denomination. Each coin included a double-date of 1979–2004, and the 1 oz coin featured a commemorative privy mark. All coins were packaged in a black leather presentation case with a black velour insert, along with a certificate of authenticity.[13] Mintage: 839 sets.
Year | Theme | Face Value | Size | Composition | Au Weight | Ag Weight (Total - Au) | Total Weight of the coin | Total Diameter | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ring | Core | ||||||||
2004 | 25th Anniversary, Gold Maple Leaf | ||||||||
$0.5 | 1⁄25 oz | .9999 silver | .9999 gold | 1.27 | 0.769 | 2.039 | 16 | ||
$1 | 1⁄20 oz | 1.581 | 0.791 | 2.372 | 18.03 | ||||
$5 | 1⁄10 oz | 3.136 | 1.33 | 4.466 | 20 | ||||
$10 | 1⁄4 oz | 7.802 | 3.098 | 10.9 | 25 | ||||
$20 | 1⁄2 oz | 15.589 | 4.486 | 20.075 | 30 | ||||
$50 | 1 oz | 31.65 | 7.96 | 39.61 | 36.07 |
Other Details
Year | Theme | Artist | Mintage | Issue Price | Finish |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | 25th Anniversary, Gold Maple Leaf | RCM Engravers | 839 | $2,495.95 | Bullion |
Special issues
[edit]99.999% Gold Maple Leaf
[edit]The gold Maple Leaf coin was .999 pure until 1982, when its purity was raised to .9999. Some coins are issued at a purity of .99999; this standard does not replace the Mint's .9999 Gold Maple Leaf coins, but is instead reserved for special editions. In 1999, the mint celebrated twenty years of the $100 Maple Leaf coin by issuing coins with a hologram, struck directly onto the coin's surface, rather than as a separate step.[14]
Year | Theme | Artist | Mintage | Issue Price | Special Notes | Image | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | Fifty Dollar Coin | N/A | at first 600 left 396 | N/A | 1 troy ounce coin; .99999 oz pure gold - experimental issue | ||
2007 | Two Hundred Dollar Coin | Stanley Witten | 500 | $1,899.95 | test bullion coin, 1 troy ounce coin; .99999 oz pure gold, privy t/e - test coin, comes encapsulated and presented in a maroon flock-lined clamshell case, available to collectors who enter draw-to-buy | ||
30,848 | N/A | 1 troy ounce coin; .99999 oz pure gold, packaged in assay card | |||||
One Million Dollar Coin | 5 | Nicknamed the Big Maple Leaf, this coin has a mass of 100 kg (which is 3,215 troy ounces). A set of five coins were minted; one was stolen from Berlin's Bode Museum on March 27, 2017.[15][16] | |||||
2008 | Two Hundred Dollar Coin | 1,700 | $1,394.64 | Special Limited Edition First Strike | |||
27,476 | N/A | 1 troy ounce coin; .99999 oz pure gold, packaged in assay card | |||||
2009 | Stanley Witten | 13,765 | |||||
2011 | Ago Aarand | 8,408 | Canadian Mountie Maple Leaf; 1 troy ounce coin; .99999 fine gold 1 oz or pur, packaged in assay card | ||||
2012 | Stanley Witten | N/A | 1 troy ounce coin; .99999 fine gold 1 oz or pur, the picture of the maple leaf on the reverse is the same as on the coin from 2007, but moved right nearly 90 degrees - as on the 100 kg coin, packaged in assay card | ||||
Five Hundred Dollar Coin | 5 ounce 9999 gold maple leaf forever, mintage of 200 | ||||||
2014 | Two Hundred Dollar Coin | Pierre Leduc | N/A | N/A | 1 troy ounce coin; .99999 fine gold 1 oz or pur, Gold Howling Wolf, packaged in assay card | ||
2,000 | CAD2,799.95 | 1 troy ounce coin; .99999 fine gold 1 oz or pur, Gold Howling Wolf, proof version comes encapsulated and presented in a maroon flock-lined clamshell case | |||||
2015 | N/A | N/A | 1 troy ounce coin; .99999 fine gold 1 oz or pur, Gold Growling Cougar, packaged in assay card | ||||
250 | CAD2,799.95 | 1 troy ounce coin; .99999 fine gold 1 oz or pur, Gold Growling Cougar, proof version comes encapsulated and presented in a maroon flock-lined clamshell case | |||||
2016 | N/A | N/A | 1 troy ounce coin; .99999 fine gold 1 oz or pur, Gold Roaring Grizzly, third and last of series, packaged in assay card | ||||
250 | CAD2,799.95 | 1 troy ounce coin; .99999 fine gold 1 oz or pur, Gold Roaring Grizzly, proof version comes encapsulated and presented in a maroon flock-lined clamshell case |
Coloured Gold Maple Leaf
[edit]Year | Theme | Artist | Mintage | Issue Price | Special Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1999 | 20th Anniversary of the GML - fractional 5 coins | Walter Ott, RCM Engravers | 13,025 | N/A | These are the first coloured coins that the Royal Canadian Mint has ever produced[17] |
2010 | Gold Maple Leaf Vancouver Olympics 3 x 31.15 g (1 oz) | Susanna Blunt | 200 | These are 3 coins of olympic series, but with red painted maple leafs on reverse - all in the wooden box |
Hologram Gold Maple Leaf
[edit]Year | Theme | Artist | Mintage | Issue Price | Special Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1999 | $1, $5, $10, $20, $50 GML Hologram Set | Walter Ott, RCM Engravers | 500 | $1,995 | First Coins for RCM to feature a hologram |
2001 | 600 | The only difference was the issue date on the coin; 2001 instead of former 1999 | |||
$10 GML Hologram | 14,614 | $195 | 1⁄4-oz | ||
2009 | $1, $5, $10, $50 Hologram Set, 30th Anniversary of Gold Maple Leaf | N/A | 750 | N/A | 1⁄20 oz, 1⁄10 oz, 1⁄4 oz, 1 oz - all packaged in a wooden box |
Olympic Maple Leaf
[edit]The Royal Canadian Mint and the International Olympic Committee reached an agreement on Olympic Gold and Silver Maple Leaf coins on August 3, 2007, and the agreement allowed the RCM to strike bullion coins with the emblems of the 2010 Winter Olympics and Paralympics.[18] The issue consists of two coins – one Gold Maple Leaf coin and a Canadian Silver Maple Leaf coin; both coins feature the date of 2008. The RCM sold Olympic coins through all of its major business lines – bullion, circulation and numismatics.[18]
Individual releases
[edit]Year | Theme | Artist | Mintage | Issue price | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1989 | 10th Anniversary Coin | Walter Ott | 6,817 | Bullion Value | The only proof version, packaged in a wooden box separately or together with 1⁄2, 1⁄4 and 1⁄10 oz coins |
1997 | 125th Anniversary of the RCMP | Ago Aarand | 12,913 | US$310 | Guaranteed value of US$310, until January 1, 2000 |
1999 | 20th Anniversary Coin | N/A | N/A | Bullion value | privy mark "20 years ans" on the reverse |
2004 | 25th Anniversary of Gold Maple Leaf | Walter Ott | 10,000 | Introduced at ANA World's Fair of Money in Pittsburgh | |
2014 | Bullion Replica | N/A | 2,000 | CAD2,699.95 | Specimen version of Maple Leaf comes encapsulated and presented in a maroon flock-lined clamshell case and accompanied by a serialized certificate |
2015 | 1⁄10 oz Gold Maple Theory of Relativity Privy | N/A | N/A | Frosted background version of Maple Leaf 1⁄10 oz with privy mark E = mc2 on the left | |
Allied Gold/L'or des alliés | Joel Kimmel | 1,500 | $649.95 | 1⁄4 oz. Flight of the Norwegian National Treasury (part of Operation Fish, that brought British, French and Norwegian gold to Canada).[19] The maple leaf of Canada is impaled with a Norwegian maple leaf. |
Privy-marked GML
[edit]Year | Privy Mark | Denomination | Size | Mintage | Issue price | Special Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1997 | Family | Five Dollars | 1⁄10 oz | 100,730 | Made for Dillon Gage | |
1998 | Eagles | 51,440 | ||||
2000 | Expo Hanover | Ten Dollars | 1⁄4-oz | 1,000 | N/A | |
2001 | Basle Coin Fair | 750 | ||||
Viking | 50, 20, 10, 5, 1 | 1 oz, 1⁄2-oz, 1⁄4-oz, 1⁄10-oz, 1⁄20-oz | 850 | Issued as a five coin set | ||
2005 | Liberation | Ten Dollars | 1⁄4 oz | 500 | Made for Royal Dutch Mint | |
2024 | First Strikes: Polar Bear Privy Mark | Five Dollars | 1⁄10 oz | 5,000 | 359.95 CAD | First gold bullion strikes featuring His Majesty King Charles III, sold directly from the Royal Canadian Mint. Encapsulated in a premium card. |
Maple Leaf 'Privy M7'
[edit]Year | Denomination | Size | Mintage | Special Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | Ten Dollars | 1⁄4-oz | 10 | This is a test coin struck in a proof or specimen finish. Distributed privately in Europe. |
2005 | 600 (other source: 1,300?) | reverse background of the coin is a "bricks" motive, instead of standard parallel lines bullion finishing as on the obverse; M7 privy mark is on the standard right position | ||
2006 | 1,093 (other source: 1,100?) | reverse upper half of the background of the coin has standard parallel lines bullion finishing as on the obverse, and the lower half has frosted finishing; M7 privy mark is on the standard right position | ||
2007 | 1,000 - other source | reverse upper half of the background of the coin is frosted, lower half - with curved "sun rays" motive, partly frosted on the parallel standard bullion finishing; on the obverse, standard parallel lines bullion finishing; M7 privy mark is on the standard right position |
Other fractional GML
[edit]Year | Description | Denomination | Size | Mintage | Issue Price | Special Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | Maple Leaf variations - standard leaf | 50, 10, 5, 1 | 1 oz, 1⁄4 oz, 1⁄10 oz, 1⁄20 oz | 750 | CAD3,739.95 | Issued as a four coin set in a wooden box plus a gold plated silver medallion - A centennial of world-class refining, all coins double dated 1911-2011, additionally on 1 oz coin privy mark "100 years/ans" |
2012 | Maple Leaf variations - three leaves | 50, 20, 10, 5, 1 | 1 oz, 1⁄2 oz, 1⁄4 oz, 1⁄10 oz, 1⁄20 oz | CAD3,999.95 | Issued as a five coin set in a wooden box - 5th Anniversary of the Million Dollar Coin | |
2013 | Maple Leaf variations - two leaves | 50, 10, 5, 1 | 1 oz, 1⁄4 oz, 1⁄10 oz, 1⁄20 oz | 600 | CAD3,899.95 | Issued as a four coin set in a wooden box - 25th Anniversary Fractional Set |
2014 | Maple Leaf variations - three leaves | CAD3,999.95 | Issued as a four coin set in a wooden box | |||
2015 | Maple Leaf variations - one leaf | Issued as a four coin set in a wooden box, every 1 oz coin is numbered, different maple leaf on every coin | ||||
2016 | Maple Leaf variations - one leaf with crown and letters | Issued as a four coin set in a wooden box, every 1 oz coin is numbered, obverse with crowned queen |
See also
[edit]- American Buffalo (coin)
- American Gold Eagle
- Britannia (coin)
- Bullion
- Canadian Silver Maple Leaf
- Canadian Platinum Maple Leaf
- Canadian Palladium Maple Leaf
- Gold as an investment
References
[edit]- ^ "Gold Maple Leaf Coins | The Royal Canadian Mint". www.mint.ca. Archived from the original on 2020-11-06. Retrieved 2019-02-09.
- ^ "Royal Canadian Mint introduces world's first 100-kilogram pure gold coin". May 3, 2007. Retrieved 2008-03-20.
- ^ "Million Dollar Coin | The Royal Canadian Mint". www.mint.ca.
- ^ "Massive $1M gold coin from Canadian Mint stolen in Berlin" The Associated Press. March 27, 2017
- ^ "Ein Jahr nach Münzraub: Noch immer gibt es keine Anklage gegen mutmaßliche Täter" [One year after coin theft: Still no indictment against alleged perpetrators]. Berliner Zeitung (in German). 2018-03-27. Retrieved 2018-04-10.
- ^ faz.net: Goldmünzen-Diebstahl aus Bode-Museum: Haftstrafen für drei Männer, access-date November 8 2020
- ^ "Gold Maple Leaf Coins". Archived from the original on 2014-03-10. Retrieved 2014-03-10.
- ^ "Maples - Coin of the Day". Nov 22, 2013. Retrieved 2014-03-10.
- ^ "What is the Austrian 100 Corona?". Retrieved July 25, 2020.
- ^ "The Problem with Canadian Gold Maple Leaf Coins". Archived from the original on 2012-08-31. Retrieved 2008-07-21.
- ^ "Canadian Gold Maple Sets Viking Privy Mark". taxfreegold.co.uk.
The finish on normal bullion maples is, in our opinion, rather disappointing, with striation marks visible where either the blanks or the dies, possibly both, have been polished prior to striking. These striation marks look like scratches, especially when trying to capture high quality photographic images
- ^ "2004 Gold Maples 25th Anniversary Edition | Chards | Tax Free Gold". taxfreegold.co.uk.
we don't like the production quality of them (Gold Maples), preferring nuggets or Britannias
- ^ Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 60th Edition, p. 442
- ^ Royal Canadian Mint Currency Timeline, p. 10.
- ^ "Goldmünze im Wert von einer Million Dollar gestohlen". Der Spiegel. 27 March 2017. Retrieved 2017-03-27.
- ^ Solid gold coin worth $4m stolen from Berlin museum BBC (www.bbc.com). Retrieved on 2017-03-27.
- ^ Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 60th Edition, p.440
- ^ a b "Maples will sport Olympic Rings", Bret Evans, Canadian Coin News, September 4 to September 17, 2007
- ^ Mint: 1⁄4 oz. Pure Gold Coin - Allied Gold - Mintage: 1,500 (2015)