Will Bennett of Dix Noonan Webb in London forwarded this press release about the first ever £10 million UK Treasury Bill to come onto the collectors' market. Thanks.
-Editor
THE NOTE THAT HELPED KEEP BRITAIN'S
FINANCES AFLOAT – THE FIRST £10 MILLION
TREASURY BILL TO BE AUCTIONED
A rare £10 million ($16.1 million) survivor of a cash management system that helped
keep the British Government's finances afloat for decades but which also enabled a
petty thief to carry out the United Kingdom's biggest-ever robbery is to be auctioned
by Dix Noonan Webb, the international banknotes, coins and medals specialists, in
London on 29 September 2014. The Treasury Bill, which promises to pay the bearer
£10 million but is stamped “cancelled”, is expected to fetch a more modest figure of
up to £15,000 ($24,200) in the sale. It is the first time that a Treasury Bill with such a
huge face value has come onto the collectors' market.
Until just over a decade ago such notes were issued every week in the City of London
under a secretive system which enabled the British Government to manage its short
term borrowing policy and make sure that sufficient funds were always available to
meet any net daily cash shortfall. Financial institutions tendered for Treasury Bills
every Friday specifying that they wanted the Bills on a particular day the following
week.
The Treasury Bills could have maturities of one month, three months, six months or a
year (although no 12 months tenders were actually issued). The financial institutions
bought them discounted for less than their face value, lending the money to the
Government until the maturity date. They were then able to claim the full amount of
the Bills from the Bank of England so making a profit. The Bills were often traded on
to other financial institutions so the Bank did not know who held them.
The Bills were collected from the Bank of England by messengers on the day
specified by the financial institutions and could be cashed in by whoever was
physically in possession of them. It was this prospect that led to John Goddard, a 58
year-old messenger with the money brokers Sheppards, being mugged at knifepoint in
a quiet side street in the City of London on 2 May 1990. The robber got away with
301 Treasury Bills and certificates of deposit, worth a total of £292 million. It remains
Britain's biggest robbery, far exceeding the £53 million taken in the UK's largest cash
heist at a Securitas depot in Kent in 2006.
The City of London Police and the American FBI infiltrated the gang involved in
laundering the Treasury Bills and eventually recovered all but two of them. One man
was jailed for his part in the crime but Patrick Thomas, the petty criminal from South
London who was believed to have carried out the mugging, was found dead from a
gunshot wound to the head before he could be charged. What was extraordinary was
that Britain's biggest and the world's second largest robbery was carried out by a low
level thief brandishing a knife in a London back street. Only the $1 billion theft from
the Central Bank of Iraq by one of Saddam Hussein's sons in 2003 has topped it.
Today the system run by the Debt Management Office, an Executive Agency of the
Treasury, is still in place but is computerised and no longer physically prints Treasury
Bills. The last Bills were produced in September 2003 and included the one to be
auctioned at Dix Noonan Webb which was given to a Government official as a
leaving present after being stamped “cancelled”.
“This is a piece of British financial history,” says Christopher Webb, head of the
banknotes and coins department at Dix Noonan Webb. “We recently sold a £1 million
Treasury Bill at auction but this is the first £10 million Bill to come onto the market.”
Dix Noonan Webb Ltd is one of the world's leading specialist auctioneers and
valuers of coins, tokens, medals, militaria and paper money of all types. Established
in 1990, the company boasts over 250 years' combined experience in this field and
stages regular auctions throughout the year.
Dix Noonan Webb
16 Bolton Street,
London W1J 8BQ
Telephone: 020 7016 1700.
E-mail: auctions@dnw.co.uk
To visit the DNW web site, see:
www.dnw.co.uk
Wayne Homren, Editor
The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization
promoting numismatic literature. See our web site at coinbooks.org.
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