TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL
PROMOTION
ZIMBABWE HYPERINFLATION BANKNOTES
SETS AVAILABLE - CALL TO CONFIRM
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The central bank of Zimbabwe
issued $100,000,000,000,000 notes during the last days of hyperinflation in 2009, and they barely paid for a loaf of bread. But their value has shot up in the marketplace SINCE
$100,000,000,000,000 NOW RECOGNISED AS THE HIGHEST HYPERINFLATION BANKNOTE EVER ISSUED
MAGNIFICENT
RESERVE BANK OF ZIMBABWE
AA SERIES SET OF
UNCIRCULATED BANKNOTES
10 TRILLION 20 TRILLION
50 TRILLION 100 TRILLION
GET THIS SET OF
EXTRAORDINARY BANKNOTES
NOW
FOR ONLY R 2 000
OR
5 SETS FOR ONLY R 9 500
OR
10 SETS FOR ONLY R 17 500
GET THEM NOW AS SUPPLY IS LIMITED A SET OF NOTES USUALLY SELLS IN THE MARKETPLACE FOR AROUND $200+ WHICH IS EQUIVALENT TO APPROXIMATELY R 2 500+
DONT MISS THIS GREAT PRICE OPPORTUNITY
images are generic - serial numbers will differ - banknote images strictly copyright of Randburg Coin - not legal tender What’s been one of the best-performing investments of the past seven years? Shares in Facebook? London property? Bitcoin? Up there with the best, believe it or not, are Zimbabwean 100 trillion dollar notes.
Mugabe resignation ushers in new era for Zimbabwe. A trillion, by the way, is a million million. There are 12 zeros in a trillion. Add another two to reach the total on the Zimbabwean 100 trillion dollar bill, the note with the most zeroes of any legal tender in all recorded history. The bills circulated for a few months in 2009 at the zenith – or, more precisely, the nadir – of one of the most terrible instances of hyperinflation in history, before Harare finally abandoned the Zimbabwean dollar in favour of the South African rand, the US dollar and several other foreign currencies. SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN
OWN THEM IN YOUR COLLECTION NOW Details:
SIZE OF EACH NOTE: 148 mm X 73 mm Description:
When the Zimbabwean dollar first came into existence in 1980 it had a similar value to the US dollar, writes Patrick Collinson. But by 2009, $1 was worth Z$2,621,984,228, 675,650,147,435,579,309,984,228. The Bank of England worries if inflation in the UK goes over 2% a year; in Zimbabwe it hit 79.6 billion per cent.The country’s central bank could not even afford the paper on which to print its worthless trillion-dollar notes. President Mugabe issued edicts to ban price rises, of comedic value, were it not for the devastation that hyperinflation wrought upon the people. The miserably low savings and incomes of the impoverished population were wiped out; shopkeepers would frequently double prices between the morning and afternoon, leaving workers’ pay almost valueless by the end of the day. In 2009 the government scrapped the currency, leaving US dollars and South African rand as the main notes and coins in circulation. SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN
TO RESERVE Call Randburg Coin Now (011) 789-2233 or (011) 789 -2234 Or email us by clicking on > This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. Offer expires - FRIDAY 23rd FEBRUARY 2018 - and/or subject to availability. E & OE - Subject to our terms and conditions.
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