Currency question- Star Notes
I got a 1999 $1 bill yesterday that I noticed was a star note. I had a feeling that it wasn't worth anything, but kept it and looked on Ebay anyway. There is an uncirculated one on Ebay going for $9.95. Is the buyer crazy? Can anyone explain the deal with star notes? Will coin collectors always find stamp and currency collector to be odd?
I collect circulated U.S. silver
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<< <i>Will coin collectors always find stamp and currency collector to be odd? >>
I think it's safe to say that everybody finds stamp and currency collectors to be odd.
<< <i>Thanks, ChangeInHistory. So all of the sequential ones on Ebay mean that large runs were defective? I guess they don't look so closely at each individual bill. A large run would have to go bad before it would be noticed. >>
I just copied that from my currency 'red book'. I thought it included old worn-out bills that were turned in as well. I'm glad I checked before replying!
A standard brick of dollar notes has 4000 notes. Lets say for simplicity that this brick has notes 1 - 4000 but note 3000 is bad. Now you could just leave it out and put in note 4001 at the end but after this keeps happening the expected ending serial number for each brick gets further and further away from the expected number (4000, 8000, 12000 etc). By replacing #3000 with D17362338* the full 4000 note brick still ends with the proper number. (Makes accounting easier)
Large runs of consecutive star notes can come from one of two ways. If a large number of sheets get messed up and rejected that could cause a long run of stars. But also once a series date ends ie Series 2003 ends and Seres 2004 begins, the remaining Series 2003 star notes are not destroyed or used to replace damaged 2004 series notes. They are banded up together and sent out to the Fed just like any other notes. So this can result in multiple PACKS (possibly even bricks) of consecutively numbered star notes entering the market.