North Korea's foreign-currency commemorative program, active through the 1990s, was never aimed at domestic circulation — these silver issues were produced explicitly for hard currency export, sold to overseas collectors to generate foreign exchange for the regime. The Hong Kong series, issued ahead of the 1997 handover, was clearly timed to capitalize on collector interest in that transition.
KM#527 is one of several distinct reverses in the Hong Kong subset, each depicting a different aspect of the city's identity as Pyongyang understood it — or found marketable.
North Korea's foreign-currency commemorative program, active through the 1990s, was never aimed at domestic circulation — these silver issues were produced explicitly for hard currency export, sold to overseas collectors to generate foreign exchange for the regime. The Hong Kong series, issued ahead of the 1997 handover, was clearly timed to capitalize on collector interest in that transition.
KM#527 is one of several distinct reverses in the Hong Kong subset, each depicting a different aspect of the city's identity as Pyongyang understood it — or found marketable.