US Mint Last Opportunity Products

The US Mint has added a “Last Opportunity” section to their website to highlight products which will only remain available for a limited time. This section has appeared on their website periodically over the past few years.View the section on the US Mint website here.


None of the products listed in the section are particularly surprising. Here is a listing of the products and the last day of sales. Availability through the listed date would also be subject to the US Mint’s remaining inventory, so earlier sell outs could occur.


November 15, 2011 12:00 Noon ET



  • 2010 Mount Hood National Park Quarter bags and rolls


As stated on the product pages, the US Mint has been offering bags and rolls of each America the Beautiful Quarter design for one year from the initial release date. The date shown above occurs at the one year mark.


November 18, 2011 12:00 Noon ET



  • 2009 Zachary Taylor Presidential Dollar Rolls


All other 2009 and 2010 Presidential Dollar rolls have already sold out, so this will clean up the offerings so only the designs from 2011 and onwards will be available.


December 1, 2011 12:00 Noon ET



  • Proof 2010 Mary Todd Lincoln First Spouse Gold Coins


This coincides with the release date of the Lucretia Garfield First Spouse Gold Coins. For a few years, the US Mint had consistently timed the close of sales to coincide with the release date for the coin one year ahead in the schedule. For the most part, this did not take place for the 2010-dated coins, which sold out earlier at unexpected times. The proof Mary Todd Lincoln coin has managed to remain available.


December 16, 2011 5:00 PM ET



  • 2011 Army Gold

  • 2011 Army Silver Dollar

  • 2011 Army Half Dollar

  • 2011 Medal of Honor Gold

  • 2011 Medal of Honor Silver Dollar


Under the authorizing legislation, the US Mint is only allowed to sell these commemorative coins during the 2011 calendar year. As in the past, the US Mint is concluding sales a few weeks before that to allow time for order processing and delivery before the close of the year. Some of this year’s commemoratives seem poised to have historically low mintages. See this post.


December 30, 2011 5:00 PM ET



  • 2010 Silver Proof Set

  • 2010 Proof Set

  • 2010 Uncirculated Mint Set

  • 2010 Presidential Dollar Proof Set

  • 2010 America the Beautiful Quarters Proof Set

  • 2010 America the Beautiful Quarters Silver Proof Set


As mentioned on this site several times before, the US Mint has been planning to conclude sales of the 2010 annual sets at the close of this year. Despite the long duration of the sales period, sales are historically low for some options. See this post.


What is surprising is some of the products that were not included in the section. The US Mint will apparently continue to sell Presidential Dollar Coin Covers from 2009 and 2010, all of the 2010 Presidential Coin & First Spouse Medal Sets, and the 2010 Lincoln Cent Two Roll Sets. In the past, the US Mint has sometimes included similar products in the “Last Opportunity” section to provide a definitive sales ending date.


Other News


On Wednesday, the US Mint implemented pricing changes for numismatic gold and platinum products. The gold products were priced lower by one pricing increment ( for each ounce of gold content). The basis for the new prices is an average gold price in the ,600 to ,649.99 range.


The single platinum product was lowered in price by one increment (0). The basis for the new price is an average platinum price in the ,450 to ,549.99 range.


Without explanation, the US Mint resumed sales of the 2010 and 2011 Silver Proof Sets and ATB Quarter Silver Proof Sets. The other previously suspended silver numismatic products remain unavailable. These suspended products include the 2011 Proof Silver Eagle, 2011-W Uncirculated Silver Eagle, 2010-P Mount Hood 5 Ounce Silver Uncirculated Coin, and 2011-P Gettysburg 5 Ounce Silver Uncirculated Coin.


Thanks To Mint News Blog

Potomac Flacks Has Moved!

Potomac Flacks readers: As of October 3, 2006, we've upgraded our site and moved from our blogspot address over to www.potomacflacks.com. Be sure to change your bookmarks...

Thanks To Potomac Flacks

Alternative investment?

Which alternatives are alternatives? Most diversified investment portfolios are effectively funds of funds so the main decision is WHO chooses the managers. Replacing long only with long short doesn't help unless skill is evident. People with rare talent go where incentives are best. Why risk YOUR money on "low cost" mediocrity? The best don't compete on fees.

Forecasting alpha and identifying good funds is hard but not impossible. After much intensive due diligence, predictive financial analytics and non-linear multifactor modeling I've found the key drivers for FUTURE superior performance are innovation, hard work, great teams, aligned interests and exclusive focus. Amazing how many "famous" funds fail on those criteria.

Value added alpha comes from selecting the right securities or the right managers. It's a similar process. I just look for new ideas and asymmetric payoffs. But conventional "wisdom" favors old products with low returns at high risk and little margin of safety. Despite investors needing consistent performance, passive pushers resist innovation and dispute after fee alpha even exists! Manager evolvability is a selectable trait.

I wouldn't mind were it not for the disastrous effect such high risk "wisdom" has on hard working peoples' retirement savings and institutions with fiduciary responsibilities. According to some economists it's luck but I do get most manager and security selection decisions correct. It's not rocket science. Just common sense, mathematical rigor and tracking the ENTIRE world.

Seek alpha, avoid beta. The persuit of perfection requires understanding over knowledge. I like shibumi investments. Improvize and adapt strategies to CHANGING alpha capture opportunity sets. I hire top teams to focus on making money and hedging risk NOT gathering assets. Hedge funds are called "replacement investments" in Japanese for good reason - traditional long only hasn't worked.

In Japan, like anywhere else, there's lots of inefficiencies for alpha capture. Why wouldn't you want "replacement investments" when bonds don't yield enough and stock "recoveries" notoriously give back gains? Dow 12,000 again is almost as boring as the many previous Nikkei 12,000s. I prefer manager skill than risky buy and hold. Constant improvement - kaizen - and continuous innovation - kakushin - are essential for absolute returns in bull AND bear markets. Warren Buffett is heavily short Nikkei puts. A bullish outlook on Japan which few BRKA watchers have followed or know about.

Luckily 2010 was good for my retirement plan. Not as great as the supposedly "difficult" 2008 or easy 2009 but still above required actuarial returns. Most external alpha vendors did better than +10% after fees - the minimum acceptable target. I directly manage a few special situations if I have an edge and the time to analyze properly. Alpha from emerging markets was a major contributor if only because volatility and mispricings are so prevalent.

As I expected a year ago, my VUPPS position delivered with Peru and Sri Lanka two of the strongest bull markets. Ukraine, Pakistan and Venezuela also did well. The long Colombia/short China, long Bangladesh/short Brazil and long Indonesia/short India trades beat the overhyped BRIC. Don't overweight BIG places; overweight the BEST opportunities.

My largest USA holding MSB went from 14 until by luck I sold near the high at 56. The second biggest BPT having been ignored after years of double digit dividends finally got attention and I reluctantly took profit at 122. Why waste time in SPY when stock picking is safer? Japan and China aren't sources of beta but fantastic for alpha. I love it when people outside their circle of competence say the places are about to implode. Watching those JGB and yen bears get trapped in short squeezes was lucrative. FXY for the yen but no ETF for the world's largest government bond market? Better to use JGB futures. Long new Japan/short old Japan positions like long Skymark Airlines 9204/short Japan Airlines 9205 did fine. Making 200% on the long and 120% on the short was even better than long Southwest LUV/short Northwest a few years ago. Yes you CAN make more than 100% on shorts.

Just weeks into 2011 and reminders from Tunisia and Egypt EGPT that security selection with innovative research and risk management is the BEST route to absolute returns. And short selling whatever groupthink says is "hot". There's lots of money to be made in China but it won't come from a "passive" China index fund. Maybe it's better to border BRICs than be a BRIC. Not surprisingly Mongolia was the top market in 2010 - all those natural resources sandwiched between Russia and China. I just bought my first Laos stock EDL, years after the initial visit. Of course I also made a few mistakes last year, which is why TRUE diversification is important. Small losses are the cost of doing business. Large drawdowns mean there is something very wrong.

Semantic arbitrage? Despite the name of this blog, in my professional life I long ago stopped using the term "hedge fund" when referring to skill-based strategies. Even "alternative investments" has become a catch-all for any manager not doing long only relative return stocks and bonds. Alpha is available from many sources in public and private markets, in numerous countries over many time horizons. In assessing a fund I strip out any betas and luck to calculate the proportion of returns due to the manager. Skill is persistent, luck isn't. I now use "innovative strategies" as a better term than the overused moniker "absolute return". That was almost as misleading as "market neutral". Every fund I look at that says it's market neutral ISN'T.

All good strategies innovate to keep performing. Alpha is extracting returns out of other market participants. Beta is too risky and unreliable to gamble on for the long term. The best managers make use of the latest financial products and drive the invention of new ones. Style drift is not bad; it may even be preferable in good manager. Paulson & Co. was a merger arbitrage fund but now trades everything from CDOs to commodities. Berkshire Hathaway is wrongly considered a buy and hold shop but Warren Buffett has used alternative strategies and hybrid securities for 60 years. Convertible bond arbitrage, derivatives trading, value investing, event driven were all "new" once. Any style not adaptable to changing market regimes is obsolete. Abnormal returns require keeping ahead of copycats.

There is still massive scope for innovation in portfolio construction and wealth management. Many investors have processes that fail to reap the full benefits of modern investment methods. New strategies and financial products are being developed all the time. Blaming credit derivatives for the recession and GFC - Global Financial Crisis - is like blaming match manufacturers when a house burns down. John Paulson's net worth rose by billion in 2010. Warren Buffett was "paid" billion from eating his own cooking and making clients far more. Their strategies have little in common other than thorough security analysis and working harder than the "crowd". How "hard" does a passive "manager" work? Be proactive not reactive. And definitely not passive.

Variant perception drives alpha. But portfolio optimization remains mired in the beta driven suboptimal mean variance world of Markowitz and Sharpe. Policy asset allocation still dominates while others pay it little attention and INSTEAD focus on security selection and strategy diversification. John Paulson, Warren Buffett and many others aim to put 100% capital to work in good opportunities. They are not concerned with 60% in stocks and 40% in bonds. I find this unrewarded, unhedged faith in asset class returns rather than skill-based strategies strange. Currently it appears we are in a bull market but that will change soon enough. Passive funds end up getting crushed.

Good managers that can make money in any conditions have to be incentivized for the hassle of accepting outside capital and undergoing exhaustive evaluation and monitoring. It's great for investors that so many still make their services available for low fees of 2 and 20 and often cheaper. The crowd fears "exotic markets" and "frontier strategies" but smart investors enjoy spending the returns the mainstream miss. Forget about alternative investments and focus on "innovative investments". Construct robust portfolios that GROW and PRESERVE capital no matter what happens. That takes hard work and it's worth paying for. Invigorate return streams with replacement investments.



Thanks To Hedge fund