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1000 Dollars Standard Chartered Bank

Issuer Standard Chartered Bank
Year 2003
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Value 1000 Dollars
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Obverse description A large intaglio-printed Chinese dragon vignette dominates the left portion of the note against a fine guilloche underprint in brown and olive tones, with the serial number printed vertically along the left margin. The bank name in both English and Chinese characters appears at upper centre, accompanied by the denomination numeral '1000' at upper left and right, with the promise-to-pay legend and date of establishment inscribed in the central field. Two facsimile signatures of the Chief Financial Officer and Director appear at lower centre, above the place and date of issue.
Obverse lettering 1000 香港渣打銀行 Standard Chartered Bank ESTABLISHED IN HONG KONG 1859 PROMISES TO PAY THE BEARER ON DEMAND AT ITS OFFICE IN HONG KONG 港幣壹仟圓 One Thousand HONG KONG DOLLARS BY ORDER OF THE COURT OF DIRECTORS
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Standard Chartered has issued banknotes in Hong Kong under a colonial-era ordinance that was preserved after the 1997 handover, making it one of three commercial banks still legally authorised to issue currency there — an arrangement almost unique in the modern world. At the $1000 level, notes see relatively low circulation velocity; most are used for large transactions, stored briefly, then returned to the banking system.

The 2003 series introduced upgraded security across the denominations following regional concerns about sophisticated counterfeiting in the late 1990s. The hologram strip on this value was among the more technically ambitious applied to any Hong Kong commercial issue at the time.

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