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PRAISE THE GOD OF HEAVEN AND EARTH
THE IRAQI DINAR HAS FINALLY REVALUED!!!
Multiply the number of Dinar you have by $________ And that will equal the number of dollars your Iraqi Dinars are worth.
To exchange your currency: if you already have an account at one of the big banks; Chase, Bank of America, Citibank, PNC, or Wells Fargo, you are in great shape. Call your branch and ask them:
1). If they exchange foreign currency at the branch you are calling, and if they do, do they exchange the Iraqi dinar.
2). If the branch you’re calling says they do not exchange foreign currency, ask them for the branch that is closest to your home or business that does exchange foreign currency.
3). What their procedure is to exchange your dinar into US dollars. (If they ask how much you have, it’s perfectly OK to tell them).
4). If they will be able to authenticate your dinar bills right there in front of you at the counter.
5). If you need an appointment to exchange your Dinar.
6). Tell them you want to exchange the Dinar for US dollars and deposit those dollars directly into your account and receive a deposit slip on the spot.
7). If you’ll have immediate access to all your funds.
8). If they say, “No, not the full amount”, ask how much the bank will hold back and when you will have access to ALL your funds. Confirm with them that even if the bank does not immediately credit your account for the full amount that the receipt that you will leave the bank with will reflect the full deposit amount.
NOTE: In item number 3 above I mentioned the word authenticate. What does authenticate mean and why is it crucial you exchange your Dinar at a branch that will authenticate your notes? After Iraq invaded Kuwait back in 1990 the United Nations put Iraq in Chapter 7 bankruptcy until they paid back Kuwait $60 billion worth of damages they had caused. Iraq then reissued all their currency by removing Saddam Hussein’s face from all their notes.
Now, after many years, these new Iraqi dinar notes that you hold can be exchanged. The notes you have are as new to you as they are to the Bank tellers. So, depending on the level of training they tell her you’ll be dealing with has, the bank may want to authenticate these new bills that they’ve never seen before They credit your account period to authenticate, the bank may use a currency book or a black light machine.
NOTE: A local bank or Credit Union will likely NOT Exchange foreign currency. If you were to leave your currency with them, all they would do is transfer it to one of the big banks for authentication and then wait for the big bank to return your currency to them. In the meantime, your currency is out of your hands, and you have no receipt, and no recourse should something “go wrong”, or turn up missing.
Since this dinar revaluation is a once in a lifetime event, if you currently bank at a small bank or a credit union, the safest way to exchange would be to go to one of the big branch locations that you confirm exchanges foreign currency and open a checking or savings account for $50 or $100. A week or so after you’ve exchanged at the big bank, if you want to, wait a week or two and then just wire the funds from the big bank back to your small bank or credit union.
BUT AGAIN, DO NOT LEAVE THE BIG BANK WHERE YOU EXCHANGED YOUR DINAR WITHOUT A DEPOSIT RECEIPT IN YOUR HAND.
If I can help in any way let me know..
THANK YOU JESUS!!!
Paul
PaulgHart@ProtonMail.com
682-360-4631