Chinese Yuan
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The Chinese Yuan is the base unit of the People’s Republic of China’s official currency, the Renminbi (RMB). Introduced in 1948, the Yuan is issued by the People’s Bank of China, based in Beijing and Shanghai.
The Chinese Yuan has two subunits: the Yiao and the Fen. One Chinese Yuan is the equivalent of 10 Yiao. One Yuan is also the equivalent of 100 Fen. At Leftover Currency we exchange both current and withdrawn Chinese Yuan banknotes, as well as Bank of China foreign exchange certificates. To convert your leftover Chinese money to cash, select the type of Chinese Yuan you want to exchange:
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100 Chinese Yuan commemorative banknote (2000 Millennium Dragon)
The bright yellow and orange banknote of 100 Chinese Yuan was issued in the Year of the Dragon, the Millenmium Year 2000. This commemorative ¥100 Renminbi banknote features a dragon on the obverse side and the China Millennium Monument in Beijing on the reverse side.You get: £8.790001 CNY = £0.0879000000 -
1 Chinese Yuan banknote (1960 issue)
The 1 Yi Yuan banknote from 1960 features a young woman, Liang Jun, driving a tractor. Lian Jun was in fact China’s first female tractor driver! On the back of the red coloured one Yuan banknote is a flock of sheep and a shepherd.You get: £0.063931 CNY = £0.0639300000 -
2 Chinese Fen banknote (1953 issue)
This small banknote of 2 Chinese Fen features a Lisunov Li-2 passenger airplane on the front side and the coat of arms of the People’s Republic of China on the back side. The 2 fen bill is the equivalent of 0.02 Chinese Yuan: The fen is a subunit worth 1/100 of a Yuan.You get: £0.001281 CNY = £0.0639300000