Gibraltar's Lady Justice bullion series occupies an odd corner of the gold coin market — technically legal tender of a British Overseas Territory, yet priced and traded purely on bullion merit. The .9999 fineness places it among the purer modern issues, a standard Gibraltar adopted to compete directly with fractional sovereign alternatives from larger mints.
Fr#136 in the Friedberg gold reference confirms its standing as a catalogued bullion type rather than a commemorative, which affects how dealers price it at auction.
Gibraltar's Lady Justice bullion series occupies an odd corner of the gold coin market — technically legal tender of a British Overseas Territory, yet priced and traded purely on bullion merit. The .9999 fineness places it among the purer modern issues, a standard Gibraltar adopted to compete directly with fractional sovereign alternatives from larger mints.
Fr#136 in the Friedberg gold reference confirms its standing as a catalogued bullion type rather than a commemorative, which affects how dealers price it at auction.