Two "cultural revolution"-era (1966-76) stamps sold for more than HK$600,000 at an auction in early March hosted by Zurich Asia, a leading stamp auction house, The Wall Street Journal reported.
Louis Mangin, the director of Zurich Asia, said stamps from the "cultural revolution" are extremely popular.
At a standing-room-only auction held in late February, Interasia Auctions sold more than 3,000 sets for a value of HK$98 million. A block of four stamps known as "Mao's Inscription to Japanese Worker Friends" from 1968, the largest existing set of this rare "cultural revolution", stamp went for HK$8.9 million, a record for a Chinese stamp at an auction. The stamps were never issued.
Zurich Asia held its winter auction on Feb 20 and 21. The top lots included two eight-fen (0.08 yuan) 1968 China stamps. A foreign collector, who happened to be in China during the "cultural revolution", held both mint-condition stamps for more than 40 years. Chinese mainland buyers had the winning bids for both stamps.