Worlds most worthless coin?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by tommyc03, Dec 31, 2014.

  1. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    If anyone wants to send me 2,000 of these Uzbeki 1 worthless.jpg stan coins for a penny, I'm game. LOL
     
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  3. deacon2828

    deacon2828 Active Member

    Sorry I am all out of those ! Wait I never had any. maybe I am missing out :)
     
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  4. Teddydogno1

    Teddydogno1 Well-Known Member

    But does it even buy anything in Uzbekistan? In the States, a cent pretty much gets you a small gumball. Sometimes. Maybe you can buy a house there for one of them, though. <shrug>

    Rob
     
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  5. mouse

    mouse Active Member

    Please find me a gumball that cost a penny, the cheapest one I can find cost a quarter.
     
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  6. Teddydogno1

    Teddydogno1 Well-Known Member

    I said "sometimes".

    Rob
     
  7. Kirkuleez

    Kirkuleez 80 proof

    There is actually a candy store somewhere, I forget where, was watching food network and they were talking about it and the entire store is 1 cent candies. They actually count each piece by hand and ring it up on an old school register. I'd still spend about 10,000,000,000 of those uzbecki coins there. I like candy.
     
  8. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    Zebs in downtown North Conway, N.H. still have penny candy and claim to have the longest candy counter in the U.S.
     
  9. Markus1959

    Markus1959 Well-Known Member

    I just spent my last 2000 of these to buy a new penny from the bank!
     
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  10. rooman9

    rooman9 Lovin Shiny Things

    The last time I saw a penny candy machine was in Gustavus Alaska. A little store had like 3-4 and even had free pennies so that little kids could have candy while their parents shopped. Gotta love small towns.
     
  11. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Yeah. Thirty years ago. :)
     
  12. iPen

    iPen Well-Known Member

    In terms of all time, I think that honor goes to the Hungarian 1 Filler coin during Hungary's hyperinflation in 1945-1946. According to Wiki.... by "August 1946... the total value of all Hungarian banknotes in circulation amounted to 1/1,000 of one US dollar."

    Filer.png
     
  13. Teddydogno1

    Teddydogno1 Well-Known Member

    Nevermind...just re-read the post.

    Man, that's not much money! "Excuse me sir. I'd like to buy your country. Do you have change for a Fiver?"

    Rob
     
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  14. Travlntiques

    Travlntiques Well-Known Member

    I have a dear friend who's parents immigrated from Germany in the late 1920's. They told her from an early age that ressecions and depressions are bad, but hyper inflation is absolute devastation.
    [​IMG]
     
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  15. bugo

    bugo Well-Known Member

    Speaking of worthless money:

    [​IMG]

    And yes, I have one in my collection.
     
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  16. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    On that Zimbabwe note, that was issued AFTER they had already had two currency revaluations each of which had chopped 12 zeros off the currency. Without those that would have been a
    100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 dollar note and would have purchased three tomatoes.

    And the Zimbabwe hyperinflation was still considered to rank second to the Hungarian inflation of the 1940's.
     
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  17. iPen

    iPen Well-Known Member

    During each country's respective hyperinflations, Zimbabwe's prices doubled every 24.7 hours, while Hungary's prices doubled every 15 hours!
     
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  18. bugo

    bugo Well-Known Member

    Did Zimbabwe ever issue notes with denominations higher than $100 trillion?
     
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  19. bugo

    bugo Well-Known Member

    I have a Zimbabwe $1 note in the same style as the $100 trillion note above. How much would THAT be worth? 1/10000th of a penny?
     
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  20. wcoins

    wcoins GEM-ber

    No.

    How much is it worth today to a collector, or what was the equivalent in US dollars of the 1 dollar note back in 2009 when it last circulated?
     
  21. John Anthony

    John Anthony Ultracrepidarian

    Ironically enough, the collector's market imbues these things with much more value than they would have in their respective economies. The Zimbabwe 100 Trillion notes are selling for a little over $20 on eBay. You could probably find them for cheaper at shows, but regardless, they have a new life as desired collectibles.
     
    Last edited: Jan 1, 2015
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