Man Buys $65 Million Skyscraper With A Credit Card, Earns $1.3 Million
Man Buys $65 Million Skyscraper With A Credit Card, Earns $1.3 Million
by Gary Leff on March 11, 2024
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. havent hit 12% since 1979, they hit 12% last in Canada in the early 1990s shortly after cash back cards were introduced there.
Whats 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!
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)