If you need more than 4 decimal places then use single or double, not currency. You could still use single or double for intermediate calculation and use currency for final value if that fits your need.
Why should I switch number type for intermediate calculations? I never use Currency because I want the full accuracy of the calculation. I don't care about the appended '0's or '9's - even if this looks ugly on a quick and dirty output, its the highest accuracy than can be achieved on a computer with the finite resolution of single, double or extended. When it comes to display the results the numbers must be converted to strings anyway, and for this there are a lot of float-to-string conversion functions which can round to any number of decimals. Currency poses the risk of enhanced error propagation when multiple operations are chained. Even the requirement to have multiplication and division in a given order is against all that I am used to.
Currency is good only for adding monetary values, but even this can be done with single/double/extended since the error in them is way beyond the 4 decimals of Currency and never shows up in a string converted to 2 decimals.
The only problem with single/double/extended is in comparison operations. As main rule, never use the =, <, <= etc operators, use SameValue of the math unit (or combinations with it) instead. The reason why currency comparisons are always (?) exact is that they basically do nothing else than SameValue(a, b, 1E-4).