The Hamburgische Bank von 1923 A.G. was one of dozens of private clearing institutions that sprang up across Germany during the hyperinflation crisis to facilitate commercial transactions when Reichsmark currency had become functionally worthless. These aluminum Verrechnungsmarken — clearing tokens — were not legal tender but served internal accounting purposes between member firms, sidestepping the collapsing national currency entirely. Hamburg's merchant banking tradition made it one of the more organized cities for this kind of private monetary improvisation.
The 1923 vintage places this piece squarely at the peak of the crisis, before the Rentenmark stabilization of November that year rendered the entire category obsolete almost overnight.
The Hamburgische Bank von 1923 A.G. was one of dozens of private clearing institutions that sprang up across Germany during the hyperinflation crisis to facilitate commercial transactions when Reichsmark currency had become functionally worthless. These aluminum Verrechnungsmarken — clearing tokens — were not legal tender but served internal accounting purposes between member firms, sidestepping the collapsing national currency entirely. Hamburg's merchant banking tradition made it one of the more organized cities for this kind of private monetary improvisation.
The 1923 vintage places this piece squarely at the peak of the crisis, before the Rentenmark stabilization of November that year rendered the entire category obsolete almost overnight.