NEW YORK -- "Euros Only" reads a handmade sign in
Billy's Antiques & Props on East Houston Street in Manhattan.
But that's really just an attention grabber. Actually, owner
Billy Leroy explains, the store will accept Canadian dollars
and British pounds, and U.S. dollars, too.
Leroy is one of a small but growing group of New York merchants
in tourist-favored neighborhoods such as SoHo, the East Village
and Times Square who have begun to accept the euro and other
foreign currencies.
With the dollar near its lowest rate ever against the euro
and the numbers of international tourists in New York at all-time
highs, some store owners figure accepting the euro offers a
convenience to customers and sometimes generates a stockpile
of a strong currency for themselves.
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Leroy began accepting euros after a buying trip to a Paris
flea market in November, when the exchange rate meant he couldn't
afford to purchase his usual volume of dressers, mirrors and
wax figurines. This is his way to raise euros back home.
"European customers are here, buying apartments, and when
they're buying apartments, they're here buying furniture for
the apartments," said Leroy, in his shop, smoking a cigar.
"This weekend, 50 percent of my customers were European."
The precipitous fall of the dollar -- currently one euro is
worth nearly $1.50 -- has already changed the city.
Last year, the weak currency helped draw 8.5 million foreign
visitors to New York, more than ever before, said George Fertitta,
chief executive of NYC & Co., the city's tourism operation,
and what they have been buying is as varied as lingerie and
condominiums. Tourists generated $28 billion in spending last
year and supported more than 350,000 jobs, and Europeans represent
the largest group of foreign visitors, he said.
The plummeting dollar and rising euro have even entered popular
culture. Rapper Jay-Z has a video in which he cruises New York
streets flashing wads of euros.
"I need euros," said Garba Bar¿, a street
vendor who sells cellphone covers and iPod cases from a table
on Broadway in SoHo. He explained that he is from Niger, which
he visits frequently and where the euro is commonly used.
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