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The obverse of a Series 7 (2015) $10 note) In July 2011, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand announced that a new issue of banknotes would be released for circulation from 2015. [10] [11] The new five-dollar and ten-dollar notes were released in October 2015, and the new twenty-dollar, fifty-dollar and one-hundred-dollar notes were released in May ...
The New Zealand twenty-dollar note is a New Zealand banknote. It is issued by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and since 1999 has been a polymer banknote. It was first issued on 10 July 1967 when New Zealand decimalised its currency, changing from the New Zealand pound to the New Zealand dollar. It has an image of Queen Elizabeth II on the front ...
The New Zealand ten-dollar note is a New Zealand banknote.It is issued by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and since 1999 has been a polymer banknote.It was first issued on 10 July 1967 when New Zealand decimalised its currency, changing from the New Zealand pound to the New Zealand dollar.
The banknotes of New Zealand comprise: Banknotes of the New Zealand pound, produced from 1840 to 1967; Banknotes of the New Zealand dollar, produced from 1967 to present;
The New Zealand two-dollar note was a banknote of the New Zealand dollar in circulation from 1967 until 1991. The note introduced on 10 July 1967, replacing the £1 note . In 1981, the fourth series of banknotes were released with minor drawing changes and a portrait update of Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse.
The New Zealand one-hundred-dollar note is a New Zealand banknote.It is issued by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and since 1999 has been a polymer banknote.It was first issued on 10 July 1967 when New Zealand decimalised its currency, changing from the New Zealand pound to the New Zealand dollar.
The New Zealand fifty-dollar note is a New Zealand banknote. It is issued by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and since 1999 has been a polymer banknote. It was first issued in 1983. The note originally had an image of Queen Elizabeth II on the front; since 1992 it has had an image of Sir Āpirana Ngata. [1] [2]
The New Zealand dollar is among the 10 most-traded currencies. [4] On 11 June 2007 the Reserve Bank sold an unknown worth of New Zealand dollars for nine billion USD in an attempt to drive down its value. This is the first intervention in the markets by the Bank since the float in 1985.