What Does Bill Gates Carry Around in His Wallet? - YouTube

Channel: Today I Found Out

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We’d bet that the vast majority of people reading this, regardless of gender, race or
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socioeconomic background, carry the same few basic items with them at all times; a phone,
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some keys, a few dollars, a debit card, and maybe some I.D are all items you’d reliably
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expect to find if you asked an average person on the street to turn out their pockets.
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But what would you find if you asked a millionaire, or even a billionaire, to do the same thing?
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As it turns out, it would appear you’d find they’d produce more or less the same or
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less from their pockets as the average Joe.
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For example, Bill Gates rarely seems to carry cash at all, or at least rarely admits to
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doing so.
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Gates is frequently asked by both journalist and the people he meets how much money he
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carries around with him on a daily basis and in most every interview we found, Gates’
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stock response is that he seldom carries either cash or a wallet with him.
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An exception to this was a preamble Gates did to an AMA (Ask Me Anything) on Reddit,
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where he pre-emptively answered some of the more popular questions he’s found himself
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being asked in the past, including “How much do you have in your wallet?”.
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The answer to which, at least at that moment in time, was a single, crisp $100 bill.
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It should be noted that the next question Gates answered was “Can I have a million
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dollars?”, which he tactfully answered by explaining he donates the bulk of his money
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to needy causes.
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This question, and Bill’s desire to answer it ahead of time, likely explains why he rarely
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carries cash, or at least doesn’t admit to doing so.
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After all, nobody can ask you for money if it’s well known you never carry any around.
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Gates is by no means an outlier and it’s an observable phenomenon that the ultra-wealthy
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rarely seem to feel the need to carry all that much cash (or even a wallet at all).
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Reasons vary from billionaire to billionaire, but the most common given we found is that
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they simply don’t need to.
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Billionaires are inevitably flanked at all times by an army of assistants and aides who
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can take care of things like restaurants bills and tips on their behalf, so the need to carry
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physical currency, credit cards, or even necessarily ID, is diminished somewhat.
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On the credit card front, it’s also worth noting that in more recent years credit and
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debit cards have become more of a status symbol than physical currency in some circles; to
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quote Vanity Fair on the matter:
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Possessing two or three of the right cards bound together by an ordinary rubber band
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now conveys a level of distinction greater than that of any cash-filled Louis Vuitton
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wallet or purse.
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The fact of that matter is that cards like the hyper-exclusive American Express Centurion
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card – which as we’ve mentioned in another article, can literally be used to buy anything
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that’s for sale, even if it costs hundreds of millions of dollars – convey more about
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a person’s wealth than even the crispest stack of hundred dollar bills.
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Another reason the super-rich don’t need to carry much cash around with them is that
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their fame largely makes it unnecessary, whether they have any aids with them or not.
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For example, prior to becoming President, Donald Trump admitted that he didn’t carry
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a wallet because people usually gave him stuff for free; in his own words from a 2013 interview:
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“You know it’s very sad.
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I go to a restaurant and almost every time they say, ‘Mr. Trump, it’s on me,’ the
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owner: ‘Mr. Trump it’s on me, no charge, Mr. Trump,’ no I never need cash.”
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This isn’t to say Trump doesn’t sometimes carry cash.
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In keeping with his penchant for showmanship, Trump did formerly claim to carry around a
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few hundred dollars at any given time – or at least he did prior to becoming president.
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He stated this was mainly just in case he needed to hand out tips, rather than the money
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being used to buy something per se.
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Beyond money or a wallet, Trump also claimed he usually only carried around two cell phones
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(an iPhone and a Samsung), which we presume one was for personal use and the other a business
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phone.
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How much this has changed since becoming president isn’t clear.
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Continuing the trend, even before ubiquitous credit and debit cards, the likes of Howard
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Hughes, John Lennon and even Elvis, reportedly seldom felt the need to carry cash.
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In Elvis’ case, many of his trademark suits were even made without pockets.
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In regards to each man, while their reasons for not carrying money varied (Hughes was
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supposedly scared of being robbed, for example, and was generally surrounded by an army of
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assistants anyway), their fame made this decision a relatively easy one to live with.
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For instance, like Trump after him, John Lennon famously expressed puzzlement at the fact
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that the wealthier and more famous he became, the less he was expected to pay for anything.
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To wit, biographer Philip Norman stated, “he discovered the strange truth that the richer
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one becomes the less obligation there seems to pay for anything.
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Clubs he visited pressed free drinks on him, restaurants automatically waived bills, guitar
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makers sent him their choicest new models simply for the glory of his patronage.”
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This segues into another thing previously alluded to that the obscenely rich seldom
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seem to carry- I.D.
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Although they likely do own passports and driving licenses, in interviews we trawled
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through in which the rich and famous were asked to turn out their pockets, few of them
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seem to bother carrying any form of identification on their person.
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The most likely reason why being, to paraphrase an obscure band this author likes, that their
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face is the ticket.
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A notable outlier to this is the Queen, who goes so far as not even having a passport
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or driver’s licence.
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But as we’ve mentioned before, while her face may be one of the most recognizable in
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the world, the reason she doesn’t have them is not because she’s famous, but because
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she simply doesn’t legally need them to travel or drive, regardless of where she is
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in the world.
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(For the reasons why, see Why Doesn’t the Queen Need a Passport?)
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Speaking of the Queen, although nobody but herself knows exactly what she carries around
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with her in her purse, we do know that she similarly never bothers to carry cash except
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on Sundays, when she traditionally carries a crisp £5 note to place in her church’s
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collection plate.
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Other items the Queen has been observed putting into or pulling out of her purse, handbag
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and pockets include lipstick, pens, napkins and on one occasion, a suction cup she attached
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to the underside of her table that she then hung her handbag on (which is kind of brilliant,
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actually).
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More unusual items the Queen is said to carry with her include personal knick-knacks, dog
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biscuits, and random mints she hands out to strangers.
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Going along with the theme that the richer you are, the less likely you are to have to
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pay for something, one of the more curious items carried by a billionaire we stumbled
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across was a special card carried by Warren Buffett that lets him have unlimited McDonald’s
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forever at certain McDonald’s.
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More specifically, as we’ve talked about before, this card is good for free food for
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life throughout Omaha McDonald’s and is one of a few items Buffett claims to carry
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on his person.
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Other items the famously spendthrift billionaire likes to carry include an original green American
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Express card from 1964, pictures of his family, and a lucky signed $50 bill from a bank his
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investment firm Berkshire Hathaway used to own.
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Curiously, Buffet is unique amongst billionaires we researched in that he’s the only one
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we found that admits to regularly carrying change.
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You see, Buffett nearly always eats breakfast at the McDonald’s near his house in Omaha
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on his way to work, and, curiously, despite literally having a card granting him unlimited
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McDonald’s for life and billions in the bank, says he pays for the breakfast with
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exact change.
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We assume he perhaps does this to avoid calling attention to himself or otherwise being delayed
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on his way to work by producing his free McDonald’s card.
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But, unfortunately for us, in the interview where he mentions carrying exact change for
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this purpose, the interviewer didn’t ask him why he doesn’t just use his free McDonald’s
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card.
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Whatever the case, Buffett also carries a few dollars with him to pay for the cans of
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Coca-Cola he drinks at the office, something he does despite owning about a 10% stake in
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Coca-Cola.
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(Bill Gates also once noted in a letter concerning his charitable foundation that Buffet and
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he were once visiting China together and decided to grab a bite to eat.
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Naturally, the pair of billionaires decided to dine at McDonald’s

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It was at this point that Buffett produced coupons to help reduce their bill
)
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Another billionaire who kindly admitted to the monetary contents of his wallet in an
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interview is Elon Musk, who stated he only had about $40 in his wallet at the time.
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In conclusion, thanks to their fantastic wealth, the uber-rich paradoxically seem to have less
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need for carrying cash, credit cards, or even ID than us lowly mortals, whether because
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their army of assistants takes care of these sorts of things for them, or simply because
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they are less expected
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to pay for
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things
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when
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they go out.