And finally…German banker tasked with six month job of counting inherited coins by hand

A German bank clerk has just completed what was possibly the most tedious job in finance this year after being detailed to spend months hand-counting 2.5 metric tons (5,500 lbs) of coins bequeathed by a truck driver to his family.
The bank worker who spent half of 2017 hand-counting several decades’ worth of pennies saved by the late trucker finally finished his monumental task this week, according to public broadcaster NDR.
The driver had packed the roughly 1.2 million coins into hundreds of freezer bags over the course of 30 years of his travels.
The coins were in one- and two-penny denominations — the smallest units of the Deutschmark, which was the currency of the Federal Republic of Germany until the introduction of the euro in 2002.
While Deutschmarks can be sent in for exchange in the mail, the deceased man’s family had to take the bags to the bank in a van after his death in May.
Because some of the coins were rusted and stuck together, Wolfgang Kemereit, the diligent employee of the Oldenburg branch of the Deutsche Bundesbank (German central bank) had the job o counting them by hand because putting them in a machine was not possible.
Herr Kemereit, who did his counting while continuing to discharge his regular bank duties, needed around one hour to tally up the contents of a single bag.
“I held each piece in my hand,” he told NDR. “I quite enjoy doing such things, so in that sense it wasn’t a problem.”
The coins totaled around €8,000 ($9,400), an unexpected inheritance for the family of the deceased man.
NDR tweeted the story on Thursday with the headline banner in German that literally translates to, “Small animals also make manure.” In English, it roughly means, “little things can also add up to a lot.”
While the Deutschmark has not been in circulation since 2002, it can be exchanged indefinitely and without any fees at any branch of the Bundesbank.
The exchange rate between the Deutschmark and the euro is fixed at 1.96 Deutschmarks to €1.
The Bundesbank has estimated that just under 13 billion DM (€6.48 million) continue to circulate in paper notes and coins.