Origins till 1900 In the 1860s the
Oriental Bank Corporation (now defunct), the
Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China (now
Standard Chartered Hong Kong) and the
Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC) began issuing notes. Denominations issued in the 1860s and 1870s included 1, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100 and 500 dollars. These notes were not accepted by the
Treasury for payment of
government dues and
taxes, although they were accepted for use by merchants. 25-dollar notes did not survive beyond the end of the 19th century, whilst the 1-dollar notes (issued only by the HSBC) were issued until 1935.
20th century Under the Currency Ordinance of 1935, banknotes in denominations of 5 dollars and above issued by the three authorised local banks (the
Mercantile Bank of India, London and China,
Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China and
the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation) were all declared
legal tender. The government took over production of 1-dollar notes. In 1941, the government introduced notes for 1, 5 and 10 cents due to the difficulty of transporting coins to Hong Kong caused by the
Second World War (a shipment of 1941 1-cent coins was sunk, making this unissued coin very rare). Just before the
Japanese occupation, an emergency issue of 1-dollar notes was made consisting of overprinted Bank of China 5-
yuan notes. In 1945, paper money production resumed essentially unaltered from before the war, with the government issuing notes of 1, 5 and 10 cents and 1 dollar, and the three banks issuing notes of 5, 10, 50, 100 and 500 dollars. 1-dollar notes were replaced by coins in 1960, with only the 1-cent note issued by the government after 1965. In 1975, the 5-dollar notes were replaced by a coin, whilst 1,000-dollar notes were introduced in 1977. The Mercantile Bank was absorbed by HSBC in 1978 and ceased issuing notes. In 1985, 20-dollar notes were introduced, whilst, in 1993, a 10-dollar coin was introduced and the banks stopped issuing 10-dollar notes. In 1994, the
Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), gave authority to the
Bank of China to issue notes. The 1-cent note issued by the Government was demonetised and ceased to be legal tender on 1 October 1995.
21st century Between 1994 and 2002 an attempt was made to replace privately issued HK$10 notes with
coins issued by the government. In response to public demand for the continuation of this note, the HKMA issued its own HK$10 notes. HK$10 banknotes are currently the only denomination issued by the HKMA, having acquired the note printing plant at
Tai Po from the
De La Rue Group of the UK on behalf of the Government. These notes were printed in paper in 2002 and have been printed in
polymer plastic since 2007. The older (green) 10-dollar banknotes previously issued by two commercial banks are still circulating and remain
legal tender, although they are being phased out since September 2005. These are popular for
lai see and are noticeably scarce in the run up to
Chinese New Year. Leading to the incorporation of
Standard Chartered Hong Kong on 1 July 2004, the
Legislative Council of Hong Kong amended the Legal Tender Notes Issue Ordinance. The amendment replaced Standard Chartered Bank with its newly incorporated subsidiary - Standard Chartered Bank (Hong Kong) Ltd - as one of the note-issuing banks in Hong Kong. ==Note-issuing banks==