Region | ![]() |
---|---|
Value | 1000 Hong Kong dollars |
Width | 163 or 165 mm |
Height | 81.5 or 82 mm |
Security features | Window, Watermark, Security thread, Registration device, Latent image, Optically Variable Ink, Iridescent image |
Material used | Cotton |
Years of printing | 1860s, 1977-present (various years depending on banks) |
The one thousand-dollar note is the highest-valued banknote in circulation in Hong Kong. Currently, this note is issued by the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC), Standard Chartered Hong Kong, and the Bank of China. Due to its gold-colored theme, this note was nicknamed “Gold Cow (Chinese: 金牛; Jyutping: gam1 ngau4)” by the locals, derived from the term “Big Cow (大牛; daai6 ngau4)” that is used for the city's five hundred-dollar note. If counted according to the notes’ serial number, it is the note with the second-lowest printing figure, higher than that of the fifty-dollar note.
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