If yesterday's Heritage Sale #3500 (
http://currency.ha.com) is anything to go by then the answer to the above question is a resounding YES !!
A good friend of mine described the overall prices realized as "insanity" and my initial reaction was to agree with him. However, the more I think about it the more I am beginning to conclude that the Canadian paper money market has finally come of age, largely as a result of the global reach of the Internet and the close proximity of American buyers. By way of comparison, Australia, which has a strong resource-based economy like Canada's but with only 60% of Canada's population, has already witnessed two Australian notes selling at public auction for well over $1,000,000 each with numerous sales well over $100,000 each. As far as I am aware, Canada has not yet witnessed a $100,000 realization in a public auction, but that's only a matter of time now.
What struck me most about yesterday's Heritage realizations was that the rarest-of-the-rare chartered bank material brought multiples of catalogue value
irrespective of condition (including some notes in rather unattractive condition). Scarce and rare notes in VF and better condition performed very strongly too. I have listed below a few chartered bank examples and you can draw your own conclusions (all prices include the 15% buyer's fee):
Lot 12630: Bank of PEI $1 1877 PMG-65 --- $2,760 (nearly 3 times book value).
Lot 12651: Bank of Nova Scotia $100 1919 EF --- $46,000 (3 times book value).
Lot 12662: Bank of Hamilton $10 1922 EF --- $20,700 (3 times book value).
Lot 12663: Bank of Hamilton $25 1922 Fine++ --- $19,550 (double book value).
Lot 12676: Bank of BNA $5 1886 (Victoria branch) F-VF --- $11,500 (previously unreported).
Lot 12711: Molsons Bank $100 1914 VG --- $27,600 (3 times book value).
Lot 12747: Royal Bank $10 1913 Battleship VF --- $1,955 (double book value).
Lot 12765: Royal Bank $5 1920 St. Kitts branch VG (badly eroded top edge) --- $10,925 (5 times book value).
Lot 12773: Bank of Ottawa $10 1906 VF --- $6,325 (close to double book value).
Lot 12780: Quebec Bank $5 1898 F-VF --- $5,750 (about double book value).
Lot 12783: Union Bank $5 1912 NWT Overprint VF --- $13,800 (3.5 times book value).
Lot 12802: Bank of Commerce $5 1892 YUKON Ovpt Fine --- $20,700 (double book value).
Lot 12831: Dominion Bank $10 1925 PMG-66 --- $10,350 (4 times book value).
Lot 12844: Farmers Bank of Canada $5 1908 Fine --- $13,800 (nearly 3 times book value).
Lot 12850: Home Bank $100 1917 F-VF --- $23,000 (over 4 times book value).
Lot 12874: Ontario Bank $5 1888 VF --- $16,100 (over 2.5 times book value).
Lot 12899: Weyburn Security Bank VF+++ --- $12,650 (about 3 times book value).
It's important to remember of course that the prices published in the latest chartered catalogue are over 2 years old. However, despite this, the latest Heritage prices were still a shock to me. Remember too that these notes were graded using the laxer American grading standards and not the more conservative Canadian standards upon which the catalogue prices are based! I don't know who can afford to pay these prices but that's another matter entirely. Also, I don't personally feel that the same notes would be able to attain anywhere close to these prices on eBay or at commercial shows or auctions in Canada but again that's another matter. The better Dominion of Canada and Bank of Canada material sold at very strong prices too but not, in general, at such high premiums over book value as the above chartered notes.
Thus, at the end of the day, it's clear that there will always be a strong demand for RARITY and TOP CONDITION.