A man claims he purchased a skyscraper using his credit card. He points out that the card he was using offers a 1% discount on purchases, and gives him 30 days to pay “which is worth 1%.”
For these calculations to be right, this would have to have taken place in the late 1980s – when interest rates were still high, but after cash back cards were first introduced. While interest rates in the U.S. haven’t hit 12% since 1979, they hit 12% last in Canada in the early 1990s shortly after cash back cards were introduced there.
What’s remarkable is,
- The seller was willing to take a credit card. While card acceptance for many retail businesses is cheaper than cash, a funds transfer for a single large transaction is going to be less expensive than credit cards – by a lot.
- This likely means that he could have just as easily negotiated a lower sales price. That is not always more advantageous.
- Today he could have earned 2% back plus the float!
This guy claims he bought a $65M skyscraper with a Credit card pic.twitter.com/sjL9DG1QyQ
— Historic Vids (@historyinmemes) February 29, 2024
At 2 transferrable points per dollar, $65 million would translate to 130,000,000 points. That actually just makes him a piker.
Delta has a $1.2 billion credit line on its corporate American Express used to charge jet fuel. And a Chinese billionaire earned 2 billion Membership Rewards points buying a ceramic tea cup at auction which was almost certainly a money laundering scheme to get funds out of mainland China, and that was in an inflated Amex points program (so it was really ‘only’ a $170 million purchase).
(HT: Hans Mast)
That many miles doesn’t buy many award seats on SkyPesos, which is an enhancement.
The seller would have to pay 3% to the card company, so I doubt this happened.
Who would sink $65,000,000 in commerical real estate these days?
Who has a credit limit like that on any card?
My AA Citibank AAdvantage Platinum card only has a $2M limit, so I could only do the earnest money. Bummer.
A Billionaire bought $170M painting with his Amex. Google it 😉
To consume so many miles would take some time during which they will be multiple devaluations. Should have taken the $
130,000,000 points would get him an Economy Plus upgrade on American.
Maybe.
If the flight wasn’t canceled. If it was, too bad. “Non refundable, sir.”
A guy buying a $65M property likely isn’t using frequent flier miles, he has his own jet and pilot or access to one.