The Bahamas issued this piece as part of a broader push by Caribbean central banks in the 2010s to capitalize on the collector bullion market, a revenue stream that had become increasingly important to small-island issuers whose domestic circulation coinage generated little seigniorage. KM#226 is a one-troy-ounce .999 fine silver issue — structurally identical in specification to dozens of contemporary sovereign bullion rounds, distinguishing itself primarily by its issuing authority rather than any minting innovation.
The Central Bank of the Bahamas has legal authority to issue commemorative coinage under the Central Bank of The Bahamas Act, though distribution for issues like this typically ran through third-party numismatic wholesalers rather than domestic banking channels.
The Bahamas issued this piece as part of a broader push by Caribbean central banks in the 2010s to capitalize on the collector bullion market, a revenue stream that had become increasingly important to small-island issuers whose domestic circulation coinage generated little seigniorage. KM#226 is a one-troy-ounce .999 fine silver issue — structurally identical in specification to dozens of contemporary sovereign bullion rounds, distinguishing itself primarily by its issuing authority rather than any minting innovation.
The Central Bank of the Bahamas has legal authority to issue commemorative coinage under the Central Bank of The Bahamas Act, though distribution for issues like this typically ran through third-party numismatic wholesalers rather than domestic banking channels.