From the DW:
“German man finds 50,000
Deutschmarks hidden in flea market clock”
A German man made the surprise
discovery of a large bundle of banknotes in an old clock he purchased at a flea
market, in a story first reported by German broadcaster NDR. The only problem
was, the banknotes were of a kind no shop or restaurant would accept — Deutsche
Marks, the currency of Germany until 2001. He only discovered the hidden
treasure trove of 50,000 Marks in the wooden paneling of the clock when he got
it home from the flea market. The man, a resident of Aurich in Lower Saxony,
took the money to the local government lost-and-found office. After a
legally-required waiting period of six months, during which no one claimed the
decades-old banknotes, the man was permitted to have them back. It is still
possible to exchange Deutsche Marks (commonly known in English as Deutschmarks
and in German as D-Marks or Marks) for euros at Germany's central bank, even
though the currency has not been used for 18 years. This is exactly what the
man did, although he also had to pay an administrative fee of €576 ($639) to
the city of Aurich.
How much is 50,000 D-Marks worth?
The official exchange rate
between Euros and Marks has remained unchanged since 2001: One Euro is worth
1.95583 Marks. This would place the value of the man's find at around €25,500
($28,400). Germany's cash-centric economy and culture of saving means that
there are often stories of cash being found in people's houses, sometimes
having been stored for many years. The central bank estimated in 2018 that
there were still over 12.6 billion Deutsche Marks (around €6.3 billion) in cash
not accounted for. A large number of these are most likely in coins lost behind
sofas and small bank notes kept as momentoes and not really worth a trip to the
bank. But there remain, no doubt, a considerable number of mini-treasure troves
like this one discovered in north Germany. And time may be running out to cash
in these hoards. Some other eurozone countries no longer allow exchanges to
euros at all: French francs, Italian lire and Greek drachma are all worthless
in 2019. It is unclear whether the current situation in Germany will or can
continue indefinitely. Nevertheless, if you make a discovery like this, it's
certainly not worth wasting any time before heading down to the German central
bank. The exchange rate is fixed, but the period has never been specified and
could one day end.
^ It doesn’t surprise me that the
Germans are so cash hungry. They have had many different currencies since the
1900s: the Goldsmark (1873-1914), the Papiermark (1914- 1923), the Rentenmark
(1923-1948), the Reichsmark (1924-1948), the Allied Military Mark (1944-1948), the
East German Mark (1948-1990 in East Germany), the Deutsche Mark (1948-1990 in
West Germany, 1990 in East Germany and from 1990-2002 in Germany) and the Euro
(2002-Present Day.) That is a lot of instability and confusion and I can see why people hid their money. With that said
it is a great and surprising find for someone – especially since you can still
convert German Marks into Euros. ^
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