Chinese Gold Panda Explained

Denomination:Gold Panda
Edge:Reeded
Composition:99.9% fine gold (Au)
Country:People's Republic of China
Obverse:Panda100YuanA.jpg
Obverse Design:Temple of Heaven
Obverse Design Date:1982
Reverse:Panda100YuanB.jpg
Reverse Design:Different illustrations of giant pandas.
Reverse Design Date:Yearly
Years Of Minting:1982–present

The Chinese Gold Panda is a series of gold bullion coins issued by the People's Republic of China. The Official Mint of the People's Republic of China introduced the panda gold bullion coins in 1982.[1] The panda design changes every year (with a single exception) and the Gold Panda coins come in different sizes and denominations, ranging from NaNto (and larger ones as well).[2] [3] [4] [5]

There is also a Silver Panda series issued with the same designs as the Gold Panda coins.

History

China issued its first gold coins picturing a panda design in 1982, in sizes of 1, of 99.9 fine gold. Beginning in 1983 another size was added – NaNozt. Larger panda coins were issued in some years, weighing 5and. These popular coins are issued in prooflike brilliant uncirculated quality with a different design each year. A freeze of the design was announced with the 2001 issues—and thus the 2002 pandas were identical to 2001. But collectors spoke up in behalf of annual changes, and China reverted to their original policy. There are several mints that produce these coins, including but not limited to: Beijing, Shanghai, Shenyang and Shenzhen. Unlike coins made by U.S. branch mints that carry mintmarks to identify their origin, Chinese mints usually do not employ them. In certain years there are minor variations—in the size of the date, style of the temple, etc.—in the coin design that allow the originating mint to be determined. Certain years are also designed by different designers. The design of the obverse changes less frequently than the design of the panda change. The official Chinese panda coins should not be confused with Chinese medals that also use a panda.

Description

Obverse:Depiction of the Temple of Heaven in the center with Chinese characters on top saying "Zhonghua Renmin Gongheguo" meaning People's Republic of China and the bottom the year of issue. If the issue is a commemorative issue, the theme will be marked here also.

Reverse:Different portraits of panda that changes every year (except for 2001 and 2002, which share the same design).

The official distributor for the Gold and Silver Panda coins in China is the China Gold Coin Corporation (CGCC); in the United States, Panda America has been an official distributor since 1982.

Denominations

The Gold Pandas are legal tender in the People's Republic of China and are currently issued in face value denominations of 500, 200, 100, 50 and 20 yuan;[6] from 1982 through 2000 they were issued in denominations of 100, 50, 25, and 10 yuan with the 5 yuan added in 1983. Through 2015, these corresponded with 1, of gold, respectively. An exception was 1991, when 1-gram Gold Pandas were minted, issued in the denomination of 3 yuan. 2015 was the only year that the Gold Panda did not have any denomination imprinted on the coin.

Face value (1982-2000)Face value (2001-2015)Nominal gold weightFine weightTotal weightDiameterThickness
100 yuan500 yuan1 troy ounce31.103 g32.05 mm2.70 mm
50 yuan200 yuan1/2 troy ounce15.5515 g27.00 mm1.85 mm
25 yuan100 yuan1/4 troy ounce7.7758 g21.95 mm1.53 mm
10 yuan50 yuan1/10 troy ounce3.1103 g17.95 mm1.05 mm
5 yuan20 yuan1/20 troy ounce1.5552 g13.92 mm0.83 mm

Revised weights

Starting in 2016, the weight system of troy ounces was replaced by the metric system of grams, the standard system of weights used in the People's Republic of China. This change may affect bullion buyers, who calculate their holdings in ounces, more than coin collectors who collect by denomination.[7]

Face valueNominal gold weightFine weightTotal weightDiameterThickness
500 yuan0.9645 troy ounce30 g32 mm2.70 mm
200 yuan0.4823 troy ounce15 g27 mm1.85 mm
100 yuan0.2572 troy ounce8 g22 mm1.53 mm
50 yuan0.0965 troy ounce3 g18 mm1.05 mm
10 yuan0.0322 troy ounce1 g10 mm0.83 mm

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A Brief History of the Chinese Gold Panda. Coin Week. Tyler. Rossi. 19 January 2023. 14 June 2023. 28 May 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230528220642/https://coinweek.com/a-brief-history-of-the-chinese-gold-panda/. live.
  2. Web site: China to issue 2023 panda commemorative coins. People's Daily. 25 October 2022. Hongyu, Wu Chengliang. 14 June 2023. 31 October 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20221031210417/http://en.people.cn/n3/2022/1025/c90000-10163181.html. live.
  3. Web site: What Are the Common Coin Types?. James. Miller. Sophia. Rodriguez. 23 May 2022. McGruff.com. 14 June 2023.
  4. Web site: The History of the Chinese Gold Pand. 21 November 2016. Angela. Raymond. Bellevue Rare Coins. 14 June 2023. 9 February 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230209092228/https://www.bellevuerarecoins.com/the-history-of-the-chinese-gold-panda-in-a-nutshell/. live.
  5. Web site: 2022版熊猫金币图案发布. Beijing Daily. 15 September 2021. zh. 14 June 2023.
  6. Web site: Gold Panda Bullion Coins . 2014-08-11 . 2016-10-11 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161011201854/http://www.goldbarsworldwide.com/PDF/BC_7_Gold_Panda_Bullion_Coins.pdf . live .
  7. Web site: Chinese Panda Coins – A Weighty Decision . Coin Week . 26 October 2015 . 10 July 2022 . Anthony . Peter . 29 October 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161029141337/http://www.coinweek.com/world-coins/chinese-coins-2/chinese-panda-coins-a-weighty-decision/ . dead .