This is actually something banks sell at Christmastime for gift giving, so it's not rare or valuable. You may be able to find somebody that will give you a few dollars over the $100 face value, but don't expect much more.
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65 cents.
You might be able to sell them for about $3-$4 each, but mostly because they're uncirculated rather than being in sequential order. Huge numbers of $2 bills were printed for the Bicentennial so they're neither rare nor valuable.
There were no 1901 dollar bills
There is no such thing as a "Morgan $2 bill". George T. Morgan designed coins, not bills. Most red seal $2 bills are worth only a few dollars above face value, although they can retail for higher prices if in uncirculated condtion. Given that situation, sequential serial numbers add little or nothing to their value.
17 dollars
If you have four of them, then the set is worth $80.
Two dollars. Just tell your bank cashier you want some new bills and if she has a new bundle, she'll count out up to 100 bills in sequential order.
$50, in 300 years if they dont biodegrade, $51+ dollars.
If you have four $100 bills, then the total value is $400. The only way a sequential set will have collector value is if they're an old series.
$1,300
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$150.00 They have no other value
it would be 100 notes. sequential order wouldn't increase the value of the note.
65 cents.
Count how many bills you have. That's how much they're worth. The only way there might be an additional collector value is if it's an older set and the notes are in decent condition.
Reading the question very carefully, I'd have to say "none". If the stack consists of "900 dollar bills",then there are no "50 dollar bills" in it.But the questioner is probably referring to equivalent values.900 dollar bills have a face value of $900.00 . In order to match that same face value with $50.00 bills,you need 18 of them.