100 yen coin


The 100 yen coin is a denomination of Japanese yen. The current design was first minted in silver in 1959 and saw a change of metal in 1967. It is the second-highest denomination coin in Japan after the 500 yen coin. The current 100 yen coin is one of two denominations which depict the emperor's rule date in Arabic numerals rather than Kanji. These numbers go from "昭和42" Shōwa, 42nd year of reign to "令和2" Reiwa, 2nd year of reign.

History

Silver yen

100 yen coinage was first authorized in 1951 with the specification that the coins be made of a silver alloy. The first coins were minted for circulation in 1957 which featured a phoenix on the reverse. The alloy decided upon consisted of 60% silver, 30% copper, and 10% zinc and came at a time when banknotes of the same denomination were already in circulation. The "100 yen" bill hence became a substitute to the coin as the two were allowed to co-circulate. The design of the coin was changed in 1959 which removed Latin script, and changed the reverse side to show a sheaf of rice. To commemorate the summer 1964 Olympics in Tokyo 16 million ounces of silver was used to strike the 80,000,000 coins produced. None of these coins were recorded as ever going into circulation as they were grabbed and stored away as collectors items. The usage of silver worldwide for coinage was about to take a turn though, as the price of the bullion increased dramatically. The Japanese government had planned on producing 800 million silver coins over a 10 year span, but the amount of silver held was insufficient. Silver was dropped from the coinage in 1967, which led to coin hoarding and silver smuggling outside of the country for melting.

Cupronickel yen

The new and current design of the 100 yen coin debuted in 1967, and features sakura blossoms and the denomination in Japanese. A new alloy of 75% copper and 25% nickel was decided upon to replace the former silver alloy. It was reported that by 1969 the monetary value in the old silver coins was $3 an ounce, prompting a "coin retirement" plan by the government. On August 1, 1974 one hundred yen notes were withdrawn from circulation, but post World War II dated notes were allowed to retain their legal tender status. The amount of coins produced then decreased from the mid to late 1970's as a possible attempt to control economic inflation. The issuance of the new 100 yen coin has also been cited as a factor in the rapid spread of vending machines during this decade. By the late 1970's into the early 1980's a myth was established that tied the amount of coins produced with the growing popularity of the arcade game industry. While there were reports of Japanese cities briefly running out of 100 yen coins, arcade operators would have emptied out their machines and taken the money back to the bank which kept the coins circulating.
Production of the 100 yen coin dropped going into the mid 1980's due to various proposed reasoning. Japan at the time had been in economic decline caused in part by trade tensions with other countries that were competing with Japanese exports. The Japanese government was trying to deflate the yen, and achieve more imports and less exports. Another explanation put forward is the introduction of the 500 yen coin in 1982. The Japanese mint at the time stated that a higher value coin was needed for use in vending machines. In any case mintage figures recovered towards the very end of Emperor Shōwa's reign. No coins were minted in 1989 as molds needed to make coins for Akihito had already begun. Denominations of 1, 5, 10, and 500 yen were given priority over 50 and 100 yen coins. By the mid 1990's 100-yen shops were expanding into retail chains, these "shops" are akin to American dollar stores. Coin production remained unhindered during the early years of Akihito's reign until the millennium, when 500 yen coins were turned out in record numbers. The offset caused low mintage numbers which included only 8,024,000 pieces struck in 2001, a record low for the series. The '100 yen" coin continues to be produced to the present day as the second-highest denomination of yen coinage.

Composition

Designs

Circulation figures

Shōwa

The following are circulation dates which cover Emperor Hirohito's reign. The dates below correspond with the 32nd to the 64th year of his reign. One hundred yen coins had three main different designs, but there was no overlap in mintage between them. Coins for this period will all begin with the Japanese symbol 昭和.
Year of reignJapanese dateGregorian dateMintage
32nd三十二195730,000,000
33rd三十三195870,000,000
34th三十四1959110,000,000
35th三十五196050,000,000
36th三十六196115,000,000
38th三十八196345,000,000
39th三十九196410,000,000
40th四十196562,500,000
41st四十一196697,500,000
42nd四十二1967432,200,000
43rd四十三1968471,000,000
44th四十四1969323,700,000
45th四十五1970237,100,000
46th四十六1971481,050,000
47th四十七1972468,950,000
48th四十八1973680,000,000
49th四十九1974660,000,000
50th五十1975437,160,000
51st五十一1976322,840,000
52nd五十二1977440,000,000
53rd五十三1978292,000,000
54th五十四1979382,000,000
55th五十五1980588,000,000
56th五十六1981348,000,000
57th五十七1982110,000,000
58th五十八198350,000,000
59th五十九198441,850,000
60th六十198558,150,000
61st六十一198699,960,000
62nd六十二1987193,775,000
63rd六十三1988363,112,000

Heisei

The following are circulation dates which cover Emperor Akihito's reign. Akihito was crowned in 1989, which is marked with a 元 symbol on the coin as a one year type. Coins for this period all begin with the Japanese symbol 平成.
Year of reignJapanese dateGregorian dateMintage
1st1989369,000,000
2nd1990444,953,000
3rd1991375,120,000
4th1992211,130,000
5th199382,240,000
6th199481,767,000
7th199592,874,000
8th1996237,213,000
9th1997272,086,000
10th1998252,612,000
11th十一1999179,120,000
12th十二2000172,026,000
13th十三20018,024,000
14th十四200210,667,000
15th十五200398,406,000
16th十六2004204,903,000
17th十七2005300,029,000
18th十八2006216,594,000
19th十九2007129,904,000
20th二十200893,811,000
21st二十一2009115,003,000
22nd二十二201067,905,000
23rd二十三2011178,936,000
24th二十四2012402,211,000
25th二十五2013608,892,000
26th二十六2014445,013,000
27th二十七2015410,004,000
28th二十八2016461,064,000
29th二十九2017518,927,000
30th三十2018567,960,000
31st三十一2019302,006,000

Reiwa

The following are circulation dates in the reign of the current Emperor. Naruhito's accession to the Crysanthemum Throne took place on May 1, 2019 and he was formally enthroned on October 22, 2019. Coins for this period all begin with the Japanese symbol 令和. The inaugural year coin is marked 元.
Year of reignJapanese dateGregorian dateMintage
1st201958,614,000
2nd2020TBD

Commemoratives

ImageJapanese dateGregorian dateMintageReason
三十九
Shōwa
196480,000,0001964 Summer Olympics
四十五
Shōwa
197040,000,000Expo 70 in Osaka
四十七
Shōwa
197230,000,0001972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo
五十
Shōwa
1975120,000,000Expo '75 in Okinawa
五十一
Shōwa
197670,000,000Golden Jubilee of Emperor Hirohito
二十七
Heisei
20152,324,00050th Anniversary of the inauguration of the Tōkaidō Shinkansen train service.
三十
Heisei
2018Unknown2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics
三十
Heisei
2018Unknown2020 Tokyo Summer Paralympics
三十一
Heisei
20193,948,0002020 Tokyo Summer Olympics
三十一
Heisei
20193,948,0002020 Tokyo Summer Paralympics

Reiwa
20193,948,0002020 Tokyo Summer Olympics

Reiwa
20193,948,0002020 Tokyo Summer Paralympics

Reiwa
20203,948,0002020 Tokyo Summer Olympics

Reiwa
20203,948,0002020 Tokyo Summer Paralympics