01-04-2023 09:58 AM
01-04-2023 04:51 PM
It's never been sold.
01-04-2023 04:54 PM
No managed payments
01-04-2023 05:29 PM
@raaphds wrote:
Notice the lack of feedback - from buyer or from seller - on any of these transactions. And they aren't too recent, from what I saw. AND, notice that these sellers are low-feedback users... magnets for scams. Or maybe just sport bidding from users with zero intention on paying.
Regardless, maybe I'd take a chance on a $5 or $10 or even "fancy" $20 bill, but selling a $100 bill is just asking for a false INAD. You'll make someone $100 richer - and keep alive the fantasy, for some other user, that there is real money in these bills.
Best of luck you!
01-04-2023 05:34 PM
Well if you go on YouTube or any other site there are collectors that pay money for these bills. I first found out about them on YouTube. They have a lot of information on YouTube about coin stamps currency. So I don't know why you would think that all of these sales are fake but that's your opinion. Just seeking out knowledge.
01-04-2023 05:48 PM
And people sell $100 bills all the time. And items worth more than $100. It's no riskier than selling anything else. You might have a $1 bill that could be worth $1,000 that doesn't make sense.
01-04-2023 05:52 PM
Hey, I hope that you are right. But take a look at the listings and the solds. There are over 10,000 "fancy serial number" listings. 10,000 means that they aren't terribly rare. Absolutely, you can get a big multiple to face value on a small denomination bill. But take a look at those $100 "fancy" bills - most sell for very close to $100 each. I don't see how sellers are making out, after fees. Throw in the INAD risk from a scammer, and no way I'd list one.
For those items that are fetching far more than $100, I do doubt that those sales went through. On the several that I spot checked, NONE had feedback from buyer or seller. None! That is a decent clue that the sales were never consumated.
Oh, and those YouTube videos - dude shows "sold" values on eBay, not understanding that outlandish pricing on corningware, beanie babies, and "fancy" bills aren't really reliable.
Again, I hope that your bill is worth a boatload. And I'm not saying it is a bad gamble - risk $100 to gain $3000? I'd be tempted to take that wager, even if I think that the chances or a completed sale, with no eventuality of a refund, are pretty slim.
01-04-2023 06:00 PM
"Are you taking Managed Payments on the $30,000 baseball card? I know it will probably go through the authentication process but what if someone there swaps it out for a cheap card? Are you protected? Goodluck."
------------------------
Does this have anything to do with the 'Star Dollar' in question? It's marked as the Solution to this post. Am I missing something? Thanks!
01-04-2023 06:01 PM
Well I didn't buy the $100 bill I found it in my pocket so it's not like I risk much to get it I had it already I didn't buy it so I mean anything you sell on eBay is risky and somebody might scam you out of anything not just currency. But I've sold over a million dollars worth of items on ebay since 1999. And I've been scammed before bye unscrupulous buyers. But for the most part 99.9% of those cells went through just perfect
01-04-2023 06:06 PM
Then on top of that it's a star note which adds value to a bill
01-04-2023 06:17 PM
No it has nothing to do with the star note. I accidentally hit solution.
01-04-2023 06:18 PM
And a lot of those sales on YouTube are not from eBay they are quoted irom heritage auctions
01-05-2023 12:06 AM
01-05-2023 12:18 AM
Just wondering what's fancy about the serno. More '8s' than usual?
Usually "fancy serial" means something a little more meaningful to someone willing to spend more than it's worth.
01-05-2023 03:32 AM
Thanks
01-05-2023 03:43 AM