Logo Title
obverse
reverse
The Royal Mint, 2014
United Kingdom
Context
Year: 2014
Currency:
Material
Diameter: 22 mm
Weight: 7.86 g
Silver weight: 7.85 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 99.9% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Numista: #329467
Value
Exchange value: 0.50 GBP = $0.68
Bullion value: $22.78
Inflation-adjusted value: 0.73 GBP

Obverse

Description:
Fourth crowned portrait of Queen Elizabeth II facing right, wearing the Girls of Great Britain and Ireland tiara, with a surrounding legend. Plain fields.
Inscription:
ELIZABETH'II'D'G REG'FID'DEF

IRB

'50'PENCE'
Translation:
Elizabeth the Second by the Grace of God, Queen, Defender of the Faith

Ireland

Fifty Pence
Script: Latin
Languages: English, Latin

Reverse

Description:
Britannia standing with trident, shield, and olive branch, surrounded by legend. Plain fields.
Inscription:
'BRITANNIA'2014' 1/4 oz '999'FINE'SILVER'

NATHAN
Script: Latin
Designer: Philip Nathan

Edge

MilledNote: variety exists (see below)

Categories

Object> Armour

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2014BU

Historical background

In 2014, the United Kingdom’s currency situation was dominated by the sustained strength of the Pound Sterling (GBP) and its implications for the recovering economy. The GBP, particularly against the Euro and the US Dollar, reached multi-year highs during the year. Against the Euro, sterling climbed to around £0.78 (or €1.28 per pound) by the end of 2014, a level not seen since 2007, largely driven by the European Central Bank's move towards quantitative easing amid stagnation in the Eurozone. Against the US Dollar, the pound also appreciated significantly, breaching the $1.70 mark in the summer before settling around $1.55 by year-end as the US Federal Reserve ended its own stimulus programme.

This appreciation was primarily fueled by diverging monetary policy expectations and the UK's relatively strong economic performance. While major central banks like the ECB and the Bank of Japan were easing policy, market anticipation was building that the Bank of England (BoE) would be the first major central bank to raise interest rates from their historic low of 0.5%. Strong UK GDP growth, falling unemployment, and contained inflation led by Governor Mark Carney created a "rates up first" narrative, attracting foreign capital and boosting the pound. However, this very strength created a policy dilemma, as a stronger currency helped keep inflation well below the BoE's 2% target (ending the year at just 0.5%) but simultaneously hurt export competitiveness.

Consequently, 2014 was a year of cautious management and shifting rhetoric from the BoE. The strong pound acted as a de facto tightening of financial conditions, which allowed the Monetary Policy Committee to maintain its record-low bank rate despite robust growth. Governor Carney's guidance evolved from linking rate rises to a specific unemployment threshold (7%) to emphasising a broader range of indicators, including slack in the economy and wage growth, which remained surprisingly weak. Thus, the currency's strength was both a symbol of the UK's economic outperformance compared to its European neighbours and a complicating factor for policymakers balancing growth with the mandate for price stability.

Series: Silver Britannia

50 Pence obverse
50 Pence reverse
50 Pence
2014
2 Pounds obverse
2 Pounds reverse
2 Pounds
2014-2015
2 Pounds obverse
2 Pounds reverse
2 Pounds
2014
1 Pound obverse
1 Pound reverse
1 Pound
2014
50 Pence obverse
50 Pence reverse
50 Pence
2014
5 Pence obverse
5 Pence reverse
5 Pence
2014
50 Pounds obverse
50 Pounds reverse
50 Pounds
2015
Rare