You can still get reasonable enough approximations with more than two decimals if you do something like `int64 myWorkingMoneyVal = currentMoney * 100000`, do your work, then divide the final result by 100000. You still risk some potential truncation if your work involves division, but the larger your multiplier that you're working with, the larger divisor at the end, which will help minimize how much of an error this ends up being. The 64 bit integer space is pretty darn big, so you typically don't risk an overflow, and you will typically get better performance than using a regular "decimal" type, since on-chip integer operations are usually very fast.
EDIT:
Just a note, there's nothing special about the number 100000; pick the largest exponent of 10 that you can get away with a reasonable assurance that no overflow is possible. For a vast majority of money applications, I seriously doubt you're going to be hitting the limits of int64, so you could probably even get away with something like 1000000000.