I have this five dollar bill with a margin error. Where the word FIVE is on the seal but shifted slightly to the right.
Most Commented Posts
- August 8, 2008 -- Should "In God We Trust" Remain On American Currency? (41)
- February 26, 2009 -- Xtian: What right (specifically) would be violated by removing "In God We Trust" from US currency? (41)
- January 27, 2010 -- Do conservatives invest in gold because they have no faith in American currency? (37)
- November 24, 2008 -- Is “In God We Trust” on US currency a true statement? (35)
- January 3, 2009 -- Should the motto “In God We Trust” be removed from U.S. currency? ? (34)
- March 17, 2009 -- R&S what do you feel about "One nation under God" on US currency? (34)
- April 21, 2009 -- What would be the impact on American society if "In God We Trust" were removed from the currency? (34)
- May 7, 2008 -- Who else thinks that "in god we trust" should be removed from US currency? (33)
- January 9, 2009 -- Are coins and currency the same thing? (30)
- March 8, 2010 -- If your good looks were currency, what could you buy? (30)
This entry was posted
on Thursday, June 3rd, 2010 at 4:15 am and is filed under Currency Trading.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
June 3rd, 2010 at 4:15 am
Some of this stuff is collectible. Don’t get rid of it, that’s for sure. I’d say put it in a Zip-Loc bag and flatten the bag out with some books or something to get all the air out. Mint errors are rare enough, and most of the errors are found before circulation and the material is recycled back through the printing/minting process. You may have a heck of an investment on your hands.
June 3rd, 2010 at 4:15 am
If this is true, take it to a coin and currency dealer.
Look online or in the yellow pages.
Misprints make the currency worth more than face value IF they are real.
Get at least two different opinions.