A wonderful collection of Indian Currency Notes. : The currency rate is representative of the Bloomberg Generic Composite Rate (BGN), a representation based on indicator rates that are contributed only by market participants. The data is not based on any real market business. Currency data is delayed by 5 minutes, is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended for trading; Bloomberg does not guarantee the accuracy of the data. See full details and disclaimer.
Emerging-market stocks cemented their best week in more than eight years as they saw tight U.S.-China tensions and protests in the U.S. to focus on the back of the economic lockdown. The expected U.S. The job data helped strengthen the newly found optimism on economic growth. Developing nation currencies posted their biggest weekly advance since March 2016.
◾Important Link::
Downliad pdf from here
On November 8, 2016, the Government of India declared the ban on 500 and ₹ 1000 notes invalidated from midnight onwards. In addition to the new red 500 note, a series of new igned 500 notes has been in circulation since November 10, 2016. The 1,000 1,000 note has been suspended.
Use of worldwide rupee
The Government of India introduced the Gulf Rupee - also referred to as the Persian Gulf Rupee - replacing the Indian rupee with the Federal Reserve Bank of India Act of 1 May 1959 for circulation outside the country. The plan to create a separate currency was to scale back the strain on India's foreign reserves through gold smuggling. After India devalued the rupee on June 6, 1966, those countries still use it - Oman, Qatar and therefore the True States exchanged the Gulf rupee for his or her own currency. Kuwait and Bahrain have already done so with the Kuwaiti dinar in 1961 and therefore the Bahraini dinar in 1965, respectively.
Collection of Indian currency notes from 1905 to date in pdf format.This 88 page pdf contains photos of all currency notes. Take a look once and for all.