Russia's platinum commemorative program of the early 1990s emerged from a peculiar post-Soviet opportunity: the state-controlled platinum reserves, long suppressed from Western markets, could now be monetized directly through collector coinage. The 1994 ballet issue belongs to a series that began in 1993, with the Bank of Russia leveraging Norilsk Nickel's dominance in global platinum supply — Russia controlled roughly 60% of world output at the time — to underwrite prestige issues at minimal raw-material cost.
Mintages for this series were kept extremely low, rarely exceeding a few thousand pieces across any given year.
Russia's platinum commemorative program of the early 1990s emerged from a peculiar post-Soviet opportunity: the state-controlled platinum reserves, long suppressed from Western markets, could now be monetized directly through collector coinage. The 1994 ballet issue belongs to a series that began in 1993, with the Bank of Russia leveraging Norilsk Nickel's dominance in global platinum supply — Russia controlled roughly 60% of world output at the time — to underwrite prestige issues at minimal raw-material cost.
Mintages for this series were kept extremely low, rarely exceeding a few thousand pieces across any given year.