Remember last week when I asked if anyone had two Portugal 500 escudos notes with the same serial number? Well, no one's come forth yet, but we're seeing the same principle at work in China: if two guys claim they're Elvis, at least one of them is lying. In the case of identically numbered banknotes, at least one of them in a counterfeit. Here's an excerpt from a July 17, 2015 Coin World article by Arthur L. Friedberg.
-Editor
When the commemorative $150 notes were first issued by the Hong Kong and Shangai Banking Corp., buyers were given the opportunity to bid at auction for notes with attractive and lucky numbers, which in China would include the number 8. Some creative soul decided he would become extremely lucky if he could somehow increase the population of such notes, so he went to work, delicately cutting numbers off one note and somewhat indelicately pasting them on another. He probably should have taken more care since under careful examination the old numbers could still be seen underneath.
A local tabloid, Apple Daily, reported that a note numbered HK688888 was on sale for upwards of $60,000 to $130,000 in Hong Kong funds ($7,750 to $16,775 U.S.), and that one numbered AA368888 was being offered online for $15,000 Hong Kong ($19,935).
According to the Standard, two people claimed to have the real bank note with the same number. One said he bought it for about HK$10,000 ($1,290) on June 10 in Hong Kong and sold it via the Internet to a buyer on the mainland for HK$23,888 ($3,081).
However, a bank note dealer named Chow from just across the border in Shenzhen said that his was the real one. He knew that was so because he went to Hong Kong on the first day of issue and spent HK$500,000 ($64,500) on a whole box of the notes. When he unpacked it, lo and behold, there it was — number AA368888! He first tried to sell it for HK$28,888, later lowered his price to HK$18,888, but still had no bid. He claimed “the fake ones flowing into the market will have a bad influence on sales.” He said he knew his was real after examining it under a magnifying glass and ultraviolet light.
A stamp dealer in the Kowloon section of Hong Kong said he had been offered seven of the notes with the fancy numbers, but he could tell that they had all been “mounted.” The asking price was first HK$12,000 for the lot, but then was lowered to HK$9,000.
To read the complete article, see:
Forgers give new Hong Kong $150 notes some fancy serial numbers
(www.coinworld.com/insights/forgers-givehong-kong-s-new--150-notes-some-fancy-serial-numbers.html#)
To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see:
ALVES REIS: THE MAN WHO STOLE PORTUGAL
(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v18n29a32.html)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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