Cook Islands has issued commemorative silver under its own authority since the 1970s, a consequence of its self-governing status in free association with New Zealand — legally entitled to produce currency while holding no realistic expectation of it circulating. This "Double Eagle" issue belongs to a crowded field of privately designed bullion-adjacent pieces marketed heavily to the collector trade rather than the numismatic community in any traditional sense.
At a half-troy-ounce weight, it occupies a format popular with secondary-market bullion dealers in the 2019–2021 window, when silver spot volatility drove demand for sub-one-ounce fractional formats.
Cook Islands has issued commemorative silver under its own authority since the 1970s, a consequence of its self-governing status in free association with New Zealand — legally entitled to produce currency while holding no realistic expectation of it circulating. This "Double Eagle" issue belongs to a crowded field of privately designed bullion-adjacent pieces marketed heavily to the collector trade rather than the numismatic community in any traditional sense.
At a half-troy-ounce weight, it occupies a format popular with secondary-market bullion dealers in the 2019–2021 window, when silver spot volatility drove demand for sub-one-ounce fractional formats.