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King Charles banknotes sell for 12 times their value as collectors scramble for early editions

Undated handout photo issued by the Bank of England of the new banknotes carrying a portrait of King Charles III.  (Bank of England photo via AP) Undated handout photo issued by the Bank of England of the new banknotes carrying a portrait of King Charles III. (Bank of England photo via AP)
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A record-breaking series of auctions of King Charles III banknotes has raised 拢914,127 (US$1.2 million) for 10 U.K. charities, according to the Bank of England.

The banknotes, auctioned by Spink & Sons over the summer, sold for 11.7 times their face value of 拢78,430 (US$100,318), as collectors snapped up some of the first versions of the new cash to roll off the printing presses.

New 拢5, 拢10, 拢20, and 拢50 banknotes featuring King Charles entered circulation in the United Kingdom on June 5, marking the first time the Bank of England (BOE) has ever changed the monarch on its notes. Queen Elizabeth II, who died in September 2022, was the first monarch to appear on sterling banknotes in 1960.

The runaway success of the auctions highlights the value that collectors attach to banknotes with especially low serial numbers, which denote that they are among the first to be printed.

For example, one 拢10 note with the serial number HB01 00002 sold for 拢17,000 (US$21,764), while a sheet of 40 of the new 拢50 notes, nominally worth 拢2,000 (US$2,600), was bought for 拢26,000 (US$33,300), the highest value lot ever sold at a BOE banknote auction.

鈥淟ucky numbers鈥 also attracted high bids, according to Spink & Sons. Two 拢5 notes with serial numbers ending in 88 and 888 were auctioned for 拢2,200 (US$2,800) and 拢2,400 (US$3,100).

Undated handout photo issued by the Bank of England of the new banknotes carrying a portrait of King Charles III (Bank of England photo via AP)

Gregory Edmund, a Spink & Sons auctioneer, said the sales showed that 鈥渂anknote collecting is growing in popularity,鈥 even as 鈥渕any people are dispensing with physical cash in daily transactions.鈥

Britain鈥檚 Royal family also continues to attract interest. 鈥淢ementos of Royal history are as keenly sought after in 2024 as ever before,鈥 Edmund told CNN.

The money raised will go towards 10 charities chosen by Bank of England staff, including wildlife charity WWF-UK and the Trussell Trust, which supports food banks. The charities will receive 拢91,400 (US$116,900) each.

鈥淓ach charity does incredible work and the monies raised will have a positive impact on people across the U.K.,鈥 said Sarah John, executive director of banking at the BOE.

 there are more than 4.6 billion 拢5, 拢10, 拢20 and 拢50 physical banknotes in circulation in the U.K., collectively worth more than 拢82 billion (US$105 billion).

When the BOE releases a new banknote, it holds back some of the the first printed notes with 鈥渆specially low or symbolic serial numbers,鈥 according to an explainer its website. These are then donated to prominent individuals or institutions sometimes involved in the development of the note.

For example, when the 拢5 note featuring former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill was introduced in September 2016, the late Queen Elizabeth received the fiver with the lowest serial number 鈥 AA01 000001.

The Churchill War Rooms 鈥 the underground headquarters for the core of the British government throughout World War II and now a museum in London 鈥 received a new 拢5 note with the serial number AA01 001945, signifying the year the war ended.

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