from: http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/0413canadianmint13.html

Mint can't make money by turning out money
Los Angeles Times
Apr. 13, 2003 12:00 AM

WINNIPEG, Canada - In a small wood on Winnipeg's prairie outskirts, one of the world's biggest moneymakers is struggling to turn a profit. The reason isn't its lonesome location.

The Royal Canadian Mint's Winnipeg plant has produced coins for more than 60 countries. Its machines keen and hum in a pyramid-like building that angles above thin stands of spruce and endless expanses of farmland.

As an industry, coin stamping has also gone cold. Canada's mint lost about $1.1 million (U.S.) in 2001 and expects to report worse results for 2002 this month. It has purged its executive team and laid off 40 percent of its workers.

Other mints also hurt

Other mints that hire themselves out to foreign governments, an arcane enterprise that is equal parts marketing and metallurgy, have suffered similar setbacks.

"It's a very cyclical business, and 2002 was probably the lowest year we've had," said Beverley Lepine, the Canadian mint's vice president for manufacturing.

The advent of the euro, the economic aftershocks of Sept. 11, the lingering recession and the increasing popularity of coin-free electronic transactions have combined to reduce the demand for fresh issues of metal currency.

And even as sales soften, competition among international mints is stiffening. Canada's dozen rivals range from Great Britain and Germany to Austria and Australia. Up for grabs are contracts to churn out billions of dollars in change: piastres for Jordan, the ngwee for Zambia, pisos for the Philippines, and so on.

Mints pitch their merchandise in the language of luxury autos, trading boasts of unparalleled styling (coins with exquisite details), performance (coins resistant to counterfeiting) and durability (coins that hold their shape for decades).

"Our sales directors travel the world to countries that don't have mints," said Eddy Periz, director of the Winnipeg plant. Four floors below his office, yellow-sided presses attended by blue-uniformed workers were cutting 750 coins a minute. "It's quite expensive to operate a mint."

U.S. quit the business

The U.S. mint abandoned its offshore sideline in the 1980s after more than a century of crafting coins for countries such as Argentina, Brazil and China. It opted instead to strike commemorative coins for collectors and bullion pieces for investors. The latter are non-circulation gold, silver and platinum coins.

"We've chosen not to produce foreign circulation coins," said Michael White, a spokesman for the U.S. mint. "It was a bottom-line decision."

Exporting mints depend on a rapid "velocity of money": the rate at which coins are used to the point where they must be replaced. When consumer spending retracts, the shelf life of coins lengthens. Coins remain in bank vaults and pockets, away from the wear and tear of cash registers and parking meters. A comparable dynamic affects bank notes.

Which means a license to make money is no guarantee of job security. Last year's red ink led to the ouster of Canadian mint President Danielle Wetherup and three of her top managers. Since 2001, the mint has slashed its Winnipeg staff from 270 workers to 157.

"It was a great job while I was there," said Kellie Severin, who was laid off after three years on the production line. "I pretty much made the coins in all the steps."

The steps start with giant coils of steel that are unrolled like a carpet and "blanked," or punched, into coin-sized discs. The blanks are then plated with layers of nickel and copper, washed in acid solutions and scanned by sensors for the slightest smudge or nick.

Next, hopper belts ferry them to the presses. Dye stamps squeeze "effigies," the head and tail images, into the blanks, making them coins.

Ties to U.K. were start

Canada's status in coin commerce is rooted in its historic ties to the United Kingdom. In 1908, when Canada was still buying its coins from London, the British Royal Mint established an Ottawa branch. Britain was, and is, the planet's leading coin contractor

The Canadian government took over the Ottawa mint in the 1930s. The Winnipeg factory opened in 1976, closer to the metal mines of the country's midsection. In addition to serving foreign clients, it provides Canada with all its domestic coins. The Ottawa headquarters specializes in commemoratives and bullion.

As a crown corporation, the Canadian mint is required by law to post a profit. Circulation-coin exports can yield earnings of 4 to 7 percent but are vulnerable to economic downturns. Bullion is hardier because the precious metals often are bought as a hedge against dips on Wall Street and overseas stock exchanges.

With the recent dips, mints-for-hire can't spare a dime.

"There's a malaise in the world minting environment that's all-encompassing," said Michael Sedgwick, a U.S. representative for the British Royal Mint, which lost about $28 million in 2002.

The 1999 debut of the euro as the European Union's common currency created a glut in metals in countries that no longer had to cast national coins. The surplus depressed prices for exporting mints. Coin orders, "tenders," declined.

Then came Sept. 11 and its immediate hit on tourism. Tenders soon slipped. As the recession deepened, they fell further. Making matters worse is the proliferation of ATMs, online stores and phone cards.


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