Logo Title
The Coin Shoppe
Context
Year: 2025
Issuer: Canada Issuer flag
Currency:
(since 1858)
Total mintage: 6,500
Material
Weight: 31.56 g
Silver weight: 31.56 g
Composition: 99.99% Silver
Standard: Silver ounce
Magnetic: No
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Numista: #539238
Value
Exchange value: 20 CAD = $14.61
Bullion value: $88.54
Inflation-adjusted value: 20.12 CAD

Obverse

Description:
Portrait du roi Charles III à 74 ans, de profil gauche, en costume-cravate sur fond de motifs ondulés.
Inscription:
2025

CHARLES III D·G·REX

20 DOLLARS

SR
Script: Latin
Designer: Steven Rosati

Reverse

Description:
(fr) Au revers, l'artiste Pandora Young illustre la chute Montmorency (Québec) avec son pont suspendu. Sous lumière noire apparaît la Dame blanche, fantôme de Mathilde Robin qui, après la mort de son fiancé en 1759, se serait jetée de la chute qu'elle hanterait depuis.
Inscription:
CANADA

PY
Script: Latin
Designer: Pandora Young

Edge

Plain

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
20256,500

Historical background

In 2025, Canada's currency landscape is defined by a cautious balancing act between persistent global headwinds and domestic resilience. The Canadian dollar continues to be significantly influenced by the monetary policy divergence between the Bank of Canada and the U.S. Federal Reserve. With inflation proving stickier than anticipated in key sectors like housing and services, the BoC maintained a "higher-for-longer" interest rate posture well into the year. This, coupled with sustained demand for Canadian energy and critical minerals, provided underlying support for the loonie, preventing a more dramatic depreciation against a robust U.S. dollar driven by America's own economic strength.

Domestically, the currency's value is a double-edged sword for the economy. A moderately weaker Canadian dollar has bolstered export-oriented industries, providing a tailwind for manufacturers and resource exporters in a slowing global growth environment. However, it has also exacerbated import inflation, keeping consumer prices elevated and squeezing household purchasing power. This dynamic has complicated the Bank of Canada's path to its 2% inflation target and contributed to a continued cost-of-living crisis that dominates political discourse.

Looking forward, the primary risks to the currency are external. The loonie remains vulnerable to sudden shifts in global risk sentiment, commodity price volatility—particularly in oil and natural gas—and the pace of economic softening in major trading partners like China and the United States. While a gradual easing cycle by the BoC is anticipated late in the year, its timing and scale are carefully calibrated against Fed actions to avoid triggering a destabilizing currency plunge. Ultimately, the Canadian dollar in 2025 reflects an economy navigating a post-pandemic normalization that is proving more protracted and complex than initially hoped.

Series: Haunted Canada

25 Cents obverse
25 Cents reverse
25 Cents
2014
25 Cents obverse
25 Cents reverse
25 Cents
2015
25 Cents obverse
25 Cents reverse
25 Cents
2016
50 Cents obverse
50 Cents reverse
50 Cents
2019
20 Dollars obverse
20 Dollars reverse
20 Dollars
2025
Legendary