Niue's arrangement with the New Zealand Mint has made the island nation one of the most prolific issuers of licensed bullion and collector coinage relative to its population — roughly 1,500 people underwriting an enormous numismatic catalog. This Kitsune piece belongs to a broader series drawing on Japanese folklore, issued primarily for the East Asian collector market rather than any domestic monetary purpose.
The kitsune, a fox spirit of Japanese mythology, carries anywhere from one to nine tails depending on its age and power — a detail some releases in this series reflect through design variants.
Niue's arrangement with the New Zealand Mint has made the island nation one of the most prolific issuers of licensed bullion and collector coinage relative to its population — roughly 1,500 people underwriting an enormous numismatic catalog. This Kitsune piece belongs to a broader series drawing on Japanese folklore, issued primarily for the East Asian collector market rather than any domestic monetary purpose.
The kitsune, a fox spirit of Japanese mythology, carries anywhere from one to nine tails depending on its age and power — a detail some releases in this series reflect through design variants.