View Full Version : New $100 Bill



Plutonic Panda
04-28-2013, 04:29 AM
Well it's coming. I'm sure most have already heard about it, but here's a thread for it anyways. :)


The US Federal Reserve just announced that its redesigned $100 bills will go into circulation on October 8. From Yahoo: Meet the New $100 Bill, the World?s Most Popular Bank Note - Yahoo! Finance (http://finance.yahoo.com/news/meet-100-bill-world-most-154245088.html)

http://l3.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/aXYncWQhfw3xMUiAXdqurA--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD0yNTY7cT04NTt3PTUxMg--/http://l.yimg.com/os/publish-images/finance/2013-04-24/065e38b3-7fcd-4f69-b31e-498788fe954b_front.jpg

http://l1.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/ajYUYbuSQApMJiJkUAkwYQ--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7cT04NTt3PTYzMA--/http://l.yimg.com/os/publish-images/finance/2013-04-24/d83315a8-ab83-4fae-9d3e-a540164a7dea_back.jpg

Also another few reads:

New, high-tech $100 bill coming in October - Business on NBCNews.com (http://www.nbcnews.com/business/new-high-tech-100-bill-coming-october-6C9577543)

How The New $100 Bill Will Foil Counterfeiters | Popular Science (http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2013-04/how-new-100-bill-will-foil-counterfeiters)


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fWCpHQoyT3E

MonkeesFan
04-28-2013, 06:02 AM
I do not know, it is ugly

OKCisOK4me
04-28-2013, 10:35 AM
I'm amazed that you flip it and it's all of a sudden bigger than the front! lol

Bunty
04-28-2013, 11:02 AM
I'm amazed that you flip it and it's all of a sudden bigger than the front! lol

It's counterfeit!

zookeeper
04-28-2013, 07:30 PM
I wish the US would make our currency more colorful like in some other countries where it's looked at as works of art. I guess this is the biggest move toward more color, it's really high tech that's for sure.

boscorama
04-28-2013, 09:03 PM
I'm amazed at how quick the old bills disappear after new ones are introduced.

Larry OKC
04-30-2013, 01:54 PM
Really? I see the old versions of the various denominations almost daily. Hard to tell how effective the anti-counterfitting stuff is when they have multiple versions out there and each new design looks more and more like Monopoly money or counterfeit from the beginning...in other words unless you are looking for the security threads and other things, who can tell the real from the fake any more? They need to call in all of the old designs, replace them with the new. If you try to spend an old design after the turn in cut off date it can't be spent.

Stew
04-30-2013, 02:20 PM
Who carries cash anymore? Cash is so obsolete.

Praedura
04-30-2013, 05:27 PM
Who carries cash anymore? Cash is so obsolete.

These folks like cash.

http://i318.photobucket.com/albums/mm436/MichaelAMark/2013WheresGeorgeOklahomaCityOklahomaQuarterlyGathe ring_zps41c8d032.jpg (http://forums.wheresgeorge.com/showthread.php?t=188340)

:)

MonkeesFan
04-30-2013, 06:47 PM
Who carries cash anymore? Cash is so obsolete.

Not really, I still carry cash just in case my debit card does not work

td25er
05-01-2013, 11:33 AM
I do not know, it is ugly

Who f'ing cares?

jn1780
05-01-2013, 12:53 PM
I'm amazed at how quick the old bills disappear after new ones are introduced.

I don't think it takes a long time for "paper" money to find its way home to the mother bank(Federal Reserve) where its promptly destroyed.

MonkeesFan
05-01-2013, 06:11 PM
Who f'ing cares?

You obviously care since you posted

Mel
05-01-2013, 06:58 PM
I like the Thunder blue and orange on it.

Plutonic Panda
09-24-2013, 01:45 PM
Keep an eye out for the new $100 bill on October 8, because if you have one and it has a low serial number, it could be worth a lot of money!

''When the Federal Reserve Board releases its new, redesigned $100 bills on October 8, how much do you suppose they'll each be worth? For some of them, much more than $100.
Depending on their serial numbers, their value to currency-collectors could go as high as $15,000 each, according to the Boston Globe.

The Globe explains that collectors view certain 8-digit serial numbers as "fancier" (meaning more rare, and thus more collectible) than others. The fanciest numbers, according to collectors, include ones exceptionally low: A new $100 bill with the serial number 00000001, for example, might fetch up to $15,000.

There will be more than one such bill, because each issuing Federal Reserve Bank prefaces the serial number with a letter code designating which bank produced the bill.
Other types of "fancy" numbers are highly sought after. These include "ladders," which have their numbers in sequence (e.g., 87654321), "repeaters," which have two sets of the same four digits (e.g., 41124112), and "solids," which have eight of the same digit (e.g., 44444444).

Dustin Johnston, director of currency for Heritage Auctions in Dallas, tells the Globe that other kinds of bills, regardless of their denomination or age, may also be collectible, depending on the fanciness of their serial numbers.

Got a fancy-numbered bill? To find out what it's worth, you can contact Heritage Auctions or another auction house specializing in currency; or you can consult CoolSerialNumbers.com, which maintains a regularly-updated want list of numbers being sought by collectors''

kelroy55
09-24-2013, 02:05 PM
Who carries cash anymore? Cash is so obsolete.

I carry cash because I still like to save my change.

Zuplar
09-24-2013, 02:18 PM
Keep an eye out for the new $100 bill on October 8, because if you have one and it has a low serial number, it could be worth a lot of money!

''When the Federal Reserve Board releases its new, redesigned $100 bills on October 8, how much do you suppose they'll each be worth? For some of them, much more than $100.
Depending on their serial numbers, their value to currency-collectors could go as high as $15,000 each, according to the Boston Globe.

The Globe explains that collectors view certain 8-digit serial numbers as "fancier" (meaning more rare, and thus more collectible) than others. The fanciest numbers, according to collectors, include ones exceptionally low: A new $100 bill with the serial number 00000001, for example, might fetch up to $15,000.

There will be more than one such bill, because each issuing Federal Reserve Bank prefaces the serial number with a letter code designating which bank produced the bill.
Other types of "fancy" numbers are highly sought after. These include "ladders," which have their numbers in sequence (e.g., 87654321), "repeaters," which have two sets of the same four digits (e.g., 41124112), and "solids," which have eight of the same digit (e.g., 44444444).

Dustin Johnston, director of currency for Heritage Auctions in Dallas, tells the Globe that other kinds of bills, regardless of their denomination or age, may also be collectible, depending on the fanciness of their serial numbers.

Got a fancy-numbered bill? To find out what it's worth, you can contact Heritage Auctions or another auction house specializing in currency; or you can consult CoolSerialNumbers.com, which maintains a regularly-updated want list of numbers being sought by collectors''

I work at a bank and will be getting a few of them. Always nice to have in case they turn into something collectible.

ctchandler
09-24-2013, 02:19 PM
I try to spend cash whenever possible. I don't like using my credit card(s) and I don't like checks being treated like debit cards at most retailers. I don't disagree with the reasoning (9/11 when checks couldn't be sent by air for a week), I just won't write a check to a Walmart because of the debit concept. I do use a credit card when traveling (that's a must) and for gas locally or if I'm out of cash.
C. T.

OKCisOK4me
09-24-2013, 03:07 PM
I carry cash because I still like to save my change.

I round my transactions up to the whole dollar, thus keeping the change in my account.

venture
09-24-2013, 03:17 PM
I'm terrible with cash...so I just use the ol' debit card so I don't lose any of it. LOL

tomokc
09-24-2013, 03:27 PM
The Brits are about to change UK pounds to a more durable, plastic-like note. They say it does well in the wash cycle, but not so much under a hot clothes iron.

MWCGuy
09-24-2013, 11:12 PM
I am surprised they have not started putting expiration dates on cash.

RadicalModerate
09-25-2013, 05:28 AM
I'm amazed that you flip it and it's all of a sudden bigger than the front! lol

It's the first sign of hyperinflation.

Plus it's confusing because the bigger it is, the less it is worth.
It's sort of a variation on that old mind game scientists play with little kids involving asking them whether they'd rather have a nickel or a dime.

And who drew that picture of The Liberty Bell (in the inkwell)?
Notice how much bigger the crack has gotten?
If it looked a little more "melty" it could have been done by Salvador Dali.
As it is, it looks more like an angel character from Yellow Submarine wearing cartoon bell bottoms.

RadicalModerate
09-25-2013, 06:14 AM
These folks like cash.

http://i318.photobucket.com/albums/mm436/MichaelAMark/2013WheresGeorgeOklahomaCityOklahomaQuarterlyGathe ring_zps41c8d032.jpg (http://forums.wheresgeorge.com/showthread.php?t=188340)

:)

Is the use of the word "Quarterly" on a banner about "Currency" an intentional pun?

Dubya61
09-25-2013, 07:36 AM
Is the use of the word "Quarterly" on a banner about "Currency" an intentional pun?

and it's a picture of Jackson for the "Where's George" gathering!

RadicalModerate
09-25-2013, 07:47 AM
GOOD EYE, DUBYA!!!!
Do you suppose that it is an obscure reference to the fact that a $20 bill is now worth about what a $1 bill used to be worth?
(I haven't carried cash in so long I have to ask: "Jackson IS on a $20 bill? Isn't he? Or at least his picture is . . ?)

Plutonic Panda
09-26-2013, 01:53 PM
New $100 bill has ink well, more color, 3-D
New $100 bill heads for circulation, aims to improve security with ink well, more color, 3-D


http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/GkreMJOVB4bOrvyN2IIVCg--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9ZmlsbDtoPTUxNDtweW9mZj0wO3E9OD U7dz05NjA-/http://globalfinance.zenfs.com/images/US_AHTTP_AP_FINANCIALTIMES/fe4a7d843e1b52203e0f6a706700025b_original.jpg

''FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) -- A glitzier, high-tech version of America's $100 bill is rolling off the presses and headed for wallets soon.

Despite years of production-related delays, the updated $100 bill has undergone a major makeover that includes a color-changing ink well, 3-D security ribbon, and more texture on Benjamin Franklin's collar.

The new, more expensive C-note is scheduled to enter circulation Oct. 8 and also has a higher calling: It aims to fight back against counterfeiters by using better printers and technology.

The modifications will help people check for fake $100s without going to a bank or using a blacklight, said Michael Lambert, a deputy associate director at the Federal Reserve.

"We try and find security features that can be used at a number of different levels, from more experienced cash handlers ... down to the person on the street who really needs to know the security features so they can protect themselves," Lambert said in an interview Wednesday.

The new $100 bill still bears the image of Franklin, one of America's Founding Fathers. But it adds part of the Declaration of Independence, written in script from Franklin's left shoulder to the right edge of the bill. A quill and an ink well are printed behind the text, and a blue ribbon goes down near the center of the bill''

- Read more here: New $100 bill has ink well, more color, 3-D (http://news.yahoo.com/100-bill-ink-well-more-103843587.html)

Plutonic Panda
10-08-2013, 05:59 AM
"WASHINGTON — The new $100 bill, with an array of high-tech features designed to thwart counterfeiters, will get its coming out party on Tuesday, partial government shutdown or not.

The Federal Reserve, which has not been affected by the shutdown, will have armored trucks rolling from its regional banks around the country headed to banks, savings and loans and other financial institutions with the new C-notes.

The bills took more than a decade to develop and the introduction was plagued by production problems that set back the rollout by 21/2 years. But officials say the problems have been fixed.

Some bank customers could start seeing the new bills by Tuesday afternoon depending on how close their bank is to a regional Fed facility.

“We have 3.5 billion of these notes which we think will be more than ample to meet domestic and international demands,” said Sonja Danburg, program manager for U.S. currency education at the Fed''

- New $100 bills start circulating Tuesday | News OK (http://newsok.com/new-100-bills-start-circulating-tuesday/article/3890994)