Using a Charge Card to Buy $170 Million Painting - YouTube

Channel: Today I Found Out

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Using a Charge Card to Buy $170 Million Painting
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Throughout the late 1980s and early 1990s there was a legend that was passed around
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speaking of a special credit card only issued by American Express to people with more zeroes
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in their bank balance than a half eaten bowl of Cheerios.
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This was, of course, not true, or at least it wasn’t until 1999 when American Express
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decided to make the card a reality.
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To quote a director for the company, Doug Smith, “There had been rumors going around
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that we had this ultra-exclusive black card for elite customers.
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It wasn’t true, but we decided to capitalize on the idea anyway.”
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Dubbed “The Centurion Card”, this card is functionally identical to an American Express
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platinum card with a few added benefits exclusive to Amex’s most affluent customers.
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We won’t bore you with some of the more mundane benefits of being rich enough to have
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a platinum card, like hotel upgrades and having most transaction fees waived, because there’s
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a much more interesting benefit to talk about- the 24 hour concierge service.
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Yes, the platinum customers have unlimited, round the clock access to a number they can
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call for help doing just about anything.
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While on paper the service is supposed to be used for things like booking hotels or
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finding restaurants in a city one is not familiar with, if the individual is a little more,
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shall we say, creative, the service is essentially a 24 hour personal assistant.
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For example, consider the story of internet prankster John Hargrave, who once tried to
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push the limits of a similar service offered by his Visa Signature Chase card.
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Hargrave found that his concierge service were happy to help him do everything from
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book a trip to space to help him with a crossword puzzle he was stuck on.
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However, after asking a representative if there was something they wouldn’t do, he
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discovered it was against Chase’s policy to use the service to run personal errands,
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plan a wedding or help arrange a visit to a child prostitute

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The company did, however, admit that they’d be more than happy to help “make an appointment
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for a rendezvous at the Bunny Ranch” (a legal brothel in Nevada), if a customer so
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desired it.
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Now, keep in mind, this is the level of service offered by a regular credit card a person
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with an average income could afford- so imagine what kind of things a billionaire with an
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uber-exclusive card only granted to the upper echelons of society can get if they asked.
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If you’re imagination isn’t all that great, according to one executive at Amex asked about
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the most outlandish requests the company has fulfilled, he noted they were once asked to
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deliver a handful of sand from the Dead Sea to London.
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The company did this by sending an international courier to the shores of the Dead Sea on a
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motorcycle.
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The courier then posted the sand to the customer.
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Apparently the sand was to be used in a school project.
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In another case, the cardholder wanted to appear on a soap opera, but wasn’t sure
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how to make this happen.
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The Amex representative managed to get the woman an audition for a role in such a show.
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Yet another bizarre request was from someone wanting Amex to find the horse ridden by Kevin
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Costner in Dances with Wolves.
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They were not only able to track this down for the customer (with the horse then residing
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in Mexico), but were also able to arrange for purchase of the animal and then had it
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transported to Europe where the customer lived.
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In addition to a more tailored, dedicated concierge service, the Centurion Card comes
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with a personal travel agent, automatic access to a number of high-end clubs for rich people,
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and personal shoppers for the most exclusive stores in the world.
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The card also grants extensive travel related benefits such as free travel insurance, access
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to exclusive airport lounges and first class upgrades on flights with certain airlines.
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This might all have you wondering how exactly you get your hands on such a card and what
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the specific requirements are.
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Well, nobody outside the company knows exactly.
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You see, it’s invitation only and American Express has never released any official information
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about what criteria they use to decide who is eligible.
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This said, the rumour mill has it that if you really want an invitation for a Centurion
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Card there are three basic criteria you need to fill:
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You need to already be an American Express platinum card holder.
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You need to have used that card for at least a year.
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You need to spend on average between $250,000 and $500,000 each year on your card.
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As for any overall wealth requirement, there’s currently no consensus on how wealthy you
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need to be to be eligible for the card, though a commonly quoted annual income is about $1.3
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million minimum.
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This said, there are reportedly Centurion Card holders “who merely make mid-six-figure
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salaries”, so perhaps they use a flexible or weighted requirements system (presumably
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including net worth and credit score), rather than a more rigid one mostly based on income
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and spending habits.
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What is more definitively known is that, once offered the card, you usually have to pay
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a joining fee, plus a rather hefty annual fee.
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While it varies from country to country, for reference, in the United States it’s a $7,500
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joining fee with a further annual charge of $2,500 for each card holder.
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While this is amazingly expensive, if one travels a lot, the perks of the card, including
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that virtual personal assistant, can very easily make it worth it.
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So what can the lucky few who do own a Centurion Card buy with it?
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Well, to put it simply, anything they want.
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According to American Express executives, the card’s limit is effectively infinite
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and only bound by the holder’s individual wealth.
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To this end, the card’s actual limit is decided by a comprehensive analysis of the
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holder’s spending habits and net worth.
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As for the most extravagant thing ever purchased using one, that is probably the Amedeo Modigliani
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painting Reclining Nude which was purchased by Chinese billionaire, Liu Yiqian, in 2015.
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The total cost?
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$170 million

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And, yes, he put it on his card.
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This was actually the second time he’d used his card for such an expensive object around
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this time, previously paying $36 million for a tea cup that dated back to the Ming Dynasty.
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As if being able to pay for a $170 million painting (among many other large purchases)
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with a an Amex wasn’t ridiculous enough, Yiqian has also earned perhaps the most charge
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card reward points of anyone in history, with his wife noting they had enough points to
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fly the family in luxury for free for the rest of their lives.
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However, apparently one can also use the points to buy luxury items, such as a 26-carat diamond
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bracelet that goes for a mere 33 million rewards points

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Of course, the points weren’t the only reason he put the painting and other such expensive
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items on his charge card, instead of paying cash.
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You see, China has restrictions on how much money an individual can transfer out of country
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per year at around the equivalent of $50,000.
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Needless to say, for a billionaire with expensive tastes, this is extremely restricting when
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wanting to buy something out of country.
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By using the card, it circumvents this restriction completely as his card was issued through
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the bank of China.
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So he’s paying them back, not sending money out of country himself.