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I have a wrong version of 100 yuan in 1990. The watermark is correct and there is no avatar. How much is it worth now?

Hello collector friends:

You must first judge whether the coins in your hand are genuine coins

Then I will tell you in detail, these so-called " What exactly is "wrong version of currency"?

1. Banknotes with inverted watermarks are caused by errors in the printing process. If the direction of the entire watermarked banknote paper is turned upside down when it is fed to the printing machine for printing, then the watermark on the finished banknote will become upside down. But once such mistakes occur, they are not isolated, but a small number. It is difficult for such batch errors to escape the multiple inspections of the banknote printing factory, and it is rare for them to leak into the society after being missed. Although there are a few that slip through the net, for banknotes with upside-down watermarks like this, there is actually no error in the printing version itself, so it is not a "wrong version of the currency" in the true sense of the coin collection field.

2. More than 90% of the so-called "watermark inverted" banknotes currently promoted by the media on the market are artificially modified on the basis of normal banknotes. They are not really "leakage through the net" of the banknote printing factory as mentioned above. "of. Since many lay media are currently promoting reports that the so-called "wrong currency" is valuable, many scammers use normal banknotes as a basis, use cutting, peeling, patching and pasting to change the normal watermark to an upside-down one, pretending to be "wrong currency" to deceive people. , this phenomenon is very common somewhere in the south. The method is similar to poking and counterfeiting train tickets, but the method is more sophisticated.

3. Whether it is originally upside down or artificially changed to upside down, it has little collection value and no market reference price. Reports such as "500,000" in some news media are pure nonsense, and real coin collectors regard such articles as a joke.

I hope you can help and wish you a happy collection!