Part of a broad wave of miniature gold issues from Pacific island nations in the 2010s, this piece was struck under license with the Perth Mint or a comparable private minting house — Solomon Islands itself has no minting infrastructure. The "Baby Tiger" designation places it within the Chinese lunar calendar marketing cycle targeting collectors in Southeast Asia and the Chinese diaspora, where demand for small-denomination gold gifts tied to auspicious animals has driven a prolific secondary industry in low-weight bullion-adjacent collectibles.
At 0.5 grams, the gold content is negligible as bullion. These sell almost entirely on collector appeal rather than metal value.
Part of a broad wave of miniature gold issues from Pacific island nations in the 2010s, this piece was struck under license with the Perth Mint or a comparable private minting house — Solomon Islands itself has no minting infrastructure. The "Baby Tiger" designation places it within the Chinese lunar calendar marketing cycle targeting collectors in Southeast Asia and the Chinese diaspora, where demand for small-denomination gold gifts tied to auspicious animals has driven a prolific secondary industry in low-weight bullion-adjacent collectibles.
At 0.5 grams, the gold content is negligible as bullion. These sell almost entirely on collector appeal rather than metal value.