At 120 mm across, this falls into the oversized "show piece" category that the modern bullion market has leaned into heavily since the mid-2010s, with Liberia licensing its name to European coin producers — primarily in Germany and Austria — for exactly these kinds of collector-targeted releases. Liberia itself has no meaningful domestic minting infrastructure; the sovereign name is effectively rented.
The 2026 date makes this a forward-dated issue, a practice legal under Liberian licensing arrangements and used to extend retail sales windows before a piece technically "ages."
At 120 mm across, this falls into the oversized "show piece" category that the modern bullion market has leaned into heavily since the mid-2010s, with Liberia licensing its name to European coin producers — primarily in Germany and Austria — for exactly these kinds of collector-targeted releases. Liberia itself has no meaningful domestic minting infrastructure; the sovereign name is effectively rented.
The 2026 date makes this a forward-dated issue, a practice legal under Liberian licensing arrangements and used to extend retail sales windows before a piece technically "ages."