I have a sheet of 2004 A $20 uncut star notes. The serials are as follows: GA 00193942* GA 00205942* GA 00217942* GA 00229942* I am trying to find out what they are valued at. I do know that they are worth about $100 each bill but the fact that they are uncut has to make the value either go up or down. If someone could help me out here I would be very greatful.
welcome to coin talk, brandon lewis. I doubt those are worth what you say they are worth, but I am no expert. I like the uncut currency sheets, especially the older ones and the 32 notes ones.
I am going off what I was told I am sure that they are worth that. I have talked to a couple of coin shops that are close to me and also one post on here. The big problem is that they are uncut. The post on here was talking about a single note. I wish that they were singles. I could sale them faster, maybe.
Lindquist lists 20 dollar Boston stars at 70 each, you may get the added premium for an uncut sheet, like I said, no expert here. Just a question, is English your native language?
These have been selling on eBay for anywhere from $90 to $125 per 4-note sheet. I have two examples of the 4-note sheets.
http://www.ebay.com/sch/Paper-Money...lete=1&_dmd=1&_okw=&_fsct=&_nkw=20+uncut+star Looks like per sheet.
On the completed listings they are not selling for $209 just people asking that much and not getting it. $105 to $125 seems to be the going for prices.
Funny thing, I actually started to send you a PM and ask how you got your eBay search to show up just specifically GA-*'s simply by typing in "20 uncut star".. Then I noticed that further down the page, there are also some uncut AL-*'s. So is it just that the BEP has only released uncut star sheets of GA's and AL's? Wow, you would think if this is true, they would be worth more...
Since the BEP started selling uncut sheets of $20's, there have only been six blocks issued: 1996 AL..* 2004 EA..* 2004A GA..* 2006 IB..A 2009 JA..A, JB..A Sheets of such a high denomination just don't sell very quickly, so they rarely need more than one printing per series. For a while there, from Series 1995 to Series 2004A, *all* of the $10 and higher uncut sheets sold by the BEP had star serials. They sold so few sheets of these denominations that they didn't bother to print up special sheet runs with high 99xxxxxx serials; they just grabbed a few sheets of stars from a run that had been printed for circulation, and put those up for sale. But beginning with Series 2006, they started printing high-serial sheet runs for the $10, $20, and $50 denominations, just like they do with the $1, $2, and $5.