The new polymer £10 note featuring Jane Austen is already being flogged by thrifty eBay venders for £15 – even though it does not come into circulation until Thursday.
Notes with low serial numbers could be worth thousands when they are released this week, and one online seller is offering to queue up at banks, having already flogged 73 notes at £14.99 each.
The release will see a repeat of the scramble to find currency with the coveted ‘AA’ serial number from when the £5 polymer notes were put into general circulation earlier this year.
A post on the site by the seller says: ‘As I am a banknote collector I understand all too well the importance of condition so they will be handled with due care and attention at every step.
The new polymer £10 note featuring Jane Austen is already being flogged by thrifty eBay venders for £15
Because they are plastic, the notes are difficult to tear and can survive being put through the washing machine and other spills
There are eight different security features on the new bank note revealed this afternoon
‘The notes will be sent on the day I get them. It goes without saying they will be securely packed using a double layer of card and then posted 1st class signed for.
‘Like last year they don’t allow requests for serial numbers, you just get the next lot from their allocation.
‘Multiple purchases would be consecutively numbered.
‘I will keep you updated via ebay message and of course you can cancel at any time.’
The new currency is plastic, difficult to tear and can survive being put through the washing machine and other spills.
Adapting bank cash machines, rail ticket machines, self-service tills and other vending machines to cope with them is costing up to £236million, say consultants CMS Payment.
Not all machines are ready to take the new notes, which have extra security features, making them harder to counterfeit.
These include a see-through window framing the Queen’s portrait and Big Ben in gold foil on the front and in silver on the back.
Not all machines are ready to take the new notes, which have extra security features, making them harder to counterfeit. Bank of England governor Mark Carney is pictured with the currency
To help the blind and vision-impaired distinguish between denominations, new £10 and £20 notes will have tactile features created by a series of raised dots.
The note will be distinguishable by not having raised dots. The denominations will still be different sizes and have a similar colour scheme to existing notes.
More than 30 countries already use plastic banknotes. Australia was the first to launch them in 1988, followed by countries including New Zealand and Singapore.
Scotland has had polymer notes since March, when two mmillion were released by the Clydesdale Bank.
Legal tender status of the paper £10 featuring Charles Darwin will eventually be withdrawn in Spring 2018. The exact date will be announced at least three months in advance.
Like the £5 note already in circulation featuring Sir Winston Churchill, the new £10 banknote is made from polymer.
It is expected to last at least two-and-a-half times longer than the current paper £10 notes – around five years in total – and stay in better condition during day-to-day use.
The transition to polymer has sparked controversy after the Bank confirmed that an ‘extremely small amount’ of tallow – or animal fat – was used to produce polymer pellets, which were part of the production process for creating the notes.
Activists and religious groups have been pushing for sustainable, plant-based alternatives and have accused the central bank of forcing unethical products on the public.
The note will be the only one in circulation to feature a woman, aside from the Queen, following the replacement of the old £5 note which featured prison reformer Elizabeth Fry, with the polymer version featuring Sir Winston Churchill.
But the note has caused anger over what is claimed to be a misleading quote from Pride and Prejudice character Caroline Bingley – an antagonist in the famous novel.
The words ‘I declare after all there is no enjoyment but reading!’ feature underneath a portrait of Austen, commissioned by her family.
Bank of England chief cashier Victoria Cleland with the new £10 note featuring the author
But Twitter users criticised the decision to use a quote from a ‘detestable character’ who has no real interest in reading and only said it to attract attention from Mark Darcy – the book’s heart-throb and eventual husband of protagonist Elizabeth Bennet.
Alice Banks wrote on the micro-blogging website: ‘Whoever made the decision for the Jane Austen quote on the new £10 note has clearly never read Pride & Prejudice.’
Teresa Warner, who describes herself as a ‘Jane Austen addict’, wrote: ‘You know what’s a great idea, using a Caroline Bingley quote to celebrate Jane Austen” – said no one ever.’
Omar Moore agreed, and wrote: ‘Dear @bankofengland, why disrespect Jane Austen with a quote from a detestable character who despised reading? In poor taste. #janeausten200.’
However, some people suggested the use of the quote was ironic – something Austen is known for.
A Twitter user, known as Hope, said: ‘Perhaps they chose the quote tongue-in-cheek, as a tribute to Jane Austen’s use of irony.’
Another user, called James, said: ‘Jane Austen is the Queen of Irony, so the quote is very apt.’
Sadie Berlin wrote: ‘Folk offended by the Jane Austen quote on the tenner are just as fussy & annoying as Austen’s fussiest and most annoying characters #fitting.’
It has also caused other problems, with Britain’s banks urged to upgrade cash machines because the new polymer notes are ‘too slippery’.
Bosses at Diebold Nixdorf, the firm which makes ATMs, said the network of around 70,000 UK machines would need to be upgraded once the new polymer £10 notes enter circulation.
Some of the devices have already been improved to handle polymer £5 notes after it was released last autumn.
But Andy Mattes, chief executive of Diebold Nixforf, told the Times the new £10 ‘would be a catalyst for innovation’ around the machines.
He said: ‘Most of the old machines cannot handle polymers because they are too thin and too slippery. There will have to be an upgrade of both hardware and software.’
Ms Cleland poses with the new note, which will be issued in two months’ time on September 14
It also believed there could be upgrades to allow customers to withdraw cash using their mobile phones following improvements that allow people to pay for products and services using their devices. Barclays is understood to be testing machines to see if it is viable.
Mr Mattes added the ‘death of cash was vastly exaggerated’ ahead of an ATM Industry Association conference in London this week which marks the 50th anniversary of the cash machine.
According to the Guardian, Diebold Nixdorf has created a prototype ‘iPhone ATM’ which gets rid of the keyboard and ‘works like a tablet’ using a touchscreen.
Other ‘futuristic’ designs include ATMs that allow customers to access funds by scanning a fingerprint or a ‘selfie’ cash machine where a photo is needed to withdraw funds.