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MY GOAL: Get The AmEx Centurion Card - MY PLAN: read in article

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daisyduke
Valued Contributor

Re: MY GOAL: Get The AmEx Centurion Card - MY PLAN: read in article

I think it's great to have goals and think big. Congrats on your aspirations - like my mother used to say, See it, believe it, achieve it....thinking big typically produces big results...however... 

 

My boss has the Centurion Card....it is by invitation only....but he makes millions a year. I have to tell you, if I had all the money in the world, I would definately think twice about this card. It is truly a waste of money. It's like this: Take your 5K for initial enrollment (I thought it was around $10K, but I am not 100% sure)..., then throw it out of the window. Watch your money float away in the wind. It is definately a "status card" for sure. I get status and everything...But understand you really get nothing in return for the fee for that card.  And no, they don't waive their fees - we pay. He spends around $1 million dollars a year on this card and he still pays a fee. He is very intelligent and we have tried to negotiate this, no luck. That is someone spending that much money....

 

  

They advertise you get this you get that as part of Centurion card, but I can tell you from experience, about the only benefit we get is using their Travel Service and all of the other advertised specials, etc like chartering a private plane, it's all a hoax/gimmick. I can charter a plane for much less than I could if I used AMEX Centurion card to do it. Oh, they can get you into a resturant that is booked for that night, if you like fine dining....they are good at getting a reservation for dinner...I forget that...


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Message 11 of 24
bostonte
Frequent Contributor

Re: MY GOAL: Get The AmEx Centurion Card - MY PLAN: read in article

Amex is not going to waive the fee. If they don't waive it for people who are at Centurion level without volume generation schemes, why would they waive it for you?

 

The "perks" of the Centurion card are geared around someone that has enough money not to care, and even then they are hard to justify.

 

As mentioned a few posts above you can arrange lots of things rather easily through Amex and the attached concierge service (shopping, plane charters, fine dining, etc.) -- but hardly ever at a great price. The "perk" is that it's quick and easy, not that it's a better deal.

 

The problem? People with the schedule and income to benefit from this perk already have an assistant to do this type of thing for them, or a department at their employer that does all the booking/scheduling.

 

The rest of us would rather spend 5 minutes doing it ourself and save $300. 

 

People often mention their travel perks and airline club access. First, the large majority of the perks can be had at the Platinum level -- at a much cheaper price. If you fly all the time, perhaps lounge access, companion fares, etc. are worth the annual fee.

 

The problem? People that fly often enough to want that level of lounge access more than likely would already get it as a member of one of the higher tiers of the airline's frequent flyer program. 

 

The rest of us probably clicked around and bought a discount fare for our vacation to Europe. Only full fare tickets are eligible for free companion fares. Not really that great of a deal when you can buy two discount fares for less than one full fare. 

 

So what are you paying for?

 

If not just for the "status", the only other real perk is in granting you the card Amex has done a full review of your life. So if you are really the type of person that might stop at Christies on a whim after lunch and drop $150,000  -- the annual fee might be worth it in exchange for the confidence that your $150,000 charge goes through just fine in addition to your normal extravagant spending because Amex knows you can afford it.

 

The flip side being they'll know how you generated the charge volume and what you can really afford. So while you may get yourself a Centurion card -- it will have the same exposure limit you'd get with a green card, and is that really impressive? 

 

One thing to keep in mind: Bernie Madoff had a Platinum Card, not a Centurion. And if someone with obscene levels of extravagant spending (using other people's money) couldn't justify it...

Message 12 of 24
shniku
Valued Member

Re: MY GOAL: Get The AmEx Centurion Card - MY PLAN: read in article

I would like to thank all of you for the great advice. I am learning new things everyday because of people like you that share your knowledge with others. 

 

In the recent years, I think AmEx implemented certain changes in order to minimize the risk of account defaults. For example, my uncles account was closed because he used his card at Wal-Mart one day. They said that people who use AmEx cards in that establishment have a higher rate of defaulting on their accounts. AmEx basically tracks everything you buy, analyzes the information, and compares it to statistical data. Nowadays, many institutions are using such methods, especially the auto insurance industry. In a way, I think it is not just. Everyone should be judged independently instead of putting them in groups. I guess they don't have the means to know everything about the people, so they generalize. An example: women in general, pay less than men for auto insurance. 

 

AmEx is known for CLD's, income verification requests, and account closings. It's really annoying having to follow hundreds of rules just so that you can be on their good side, especially when they don't tell you the rules. AmEx got it's problems, but if they had not taken all those precautions, chances are they would have been weakened more severely by the recession. 

 

Money is great to have, but at this point in my life, I am to busy with school. My parents fund my living expenses and my college tuition so I really don't need money. Whatever money I make now, would be insignificant when compared to the value of the knowledge I would gain if I devoted the time to learning instead.

 

One thing I would like to do though, is set up a corporation so that I can start building corporate credit. I feel this is important to do early since I may need lots of funding later on. I'm too poor to hire lawyers and accountants so I would have to do all the learning from web sites. I don't really know what it would cost me to do all of this. I also plan not to make money in the beginning, but it may be that, in order to get a lot of corporate credit, I have to make some money with the business.

 

Anyways, I will review the posts on this site for help. If any of you know any other helpful sites, let me know.

Message 13 of 24
DI
Super Contributor

Re: MY GOAL: Get The AmEx Centurion Card - MY PLAN: read in article


@shniku wrote:

I would like to thank all of you for the great advice. I am learning new things everyday because of people like you that share your knowledge with others. 

 

In the recent years, I think AmEx implemented certain changes in order to minimize the risk of account defaults. For example, my uncles account was closed because he used his card at Wal-Mart one day. They said that people who use AmEx cards in that establishment have a higher rate of defaulting on their accounts. AmEx basically tracks everything you buy, analyzes the information, and compares it to statistical data. Nowadays, many institutions are using such methods, especially the auto insurance industry. In a way, I think it is not just. Everyone should be judged independently instead of putting them in groups. I guess they don't have the means to know everything about the people, so they generalize. An example: women in general, pay less than men for auto insurance. 

 

AmEx is known for CLD's, income verification requests, and account closings. It's really annoying having to follow hundreds of rules just so that you can be on their good side, especially when they don't tell you the rules. AmEx got it's problems, but if they had not taken all those precautions, chances are they would have been weakened more severely by the recession. 

 

Money is great to have, but at this point in my life, I am to busy with school. My parents fund my living expenses and my college tuition so I really don't need money. Whatever money I make now, would be insignificant when compared to the value of the knowledge I would gain if I devoted the time to learning instead.

 

One thing I would like to do though, is set up a corporation so that I can start building corporate credit. I feel this is important to do early since I may need lots of funding later on. I'm too poor to hire lawyers and accountants so I would have to do all the learning from web sites. I don't really know what it would cost me to do all of this. I also plan not to make money in the beginning, but it may be that, in order to get a lot of corporate credit, I have to make some money with the business.

 

Anyways, I will review the posts on this site for help. If any of you know any other helpful sites, let me know.


I'm glad you mentioned the Wal-Mart situation.  I always suspected AMEX would do something like that.  I posted something about that about 3 months ago.  

 

http://ficoforums.myfico.com/fico/board/message?board.id=creditcard&thread.id=176865&view=by_date_as...

 

Message 14 of 24
MattH
Senior Contributor

Re: MY GOAL: Get The AmEx Centurion Card - MY PLAN: read in article


@Watchmann wrote:
...[Lots of excellent advice]

 

It would seem you are overly into image, as you have posted this message over on the Auto Forum: 

http://ficoforums.myfico.com/fico/board/message?board.id=autoloans&thread.id=8933  A 22yo doesn't need two new BMW's.  Slow down and stop with the outward appearance of your life and work on actually making some money for the future.

Message Edited by Watchmann on 12-05-2009 10:04 AM

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Banking/HomebuyingGuide/weston-stop-acting-rich-start-getting-rich.aspx

 

TU 791 02/11/2013, EQ 800 1/29/2011 , EX Plus FAKO 812, EX Vantage Score 955 3/19/2010 wife's EQ 9/23/2009 803
EX always was my highest when we could pull all three
Always remember: big print giveth, small print taketh away
If you dunno what tanstaafl means you must Google it
Message 15 of 24
MattH
Senior Contributor

Re: MY GOAL: Get The AmEx Centurion Card - MY PLAN: read in article


@DI wrote:

...

 

In the recent years, I think AmEx implemented certain changes in order to minimize the risk of account defaults. For example, my uncles account was closed because he used his card at Wal-Mart one day. They said that people who use AmEx cards in that establishment have a higher rate of defaulting on their accounts. AmEx basically tracks everything you buy, analyzes the information, and compares it to statistical data. Nowadays, many institutions are using such methods, especially the auto insurance industry. In a way, I think it is not just. Everyone should be judged independently instead of putting them in groups. I guess they don't have the means to know everything about the people, so they generalize. An example: women in general, pay less than men for auto insurance. 

...

I'm glad you mentioned the Wal-Mart situation.  I always suspected AMEX would do something like that.  I posted something about that about 3 months ago.  

 

http://ficoforums.myfico.com/fico/board/message?board.id=creditcard&thread.id=176865&view=by_date_as...

 


I rarely go to Walmart (mostly when visiting relatives in rural areas where for certain things they are unfortunately the only option because they killed off so many local stores and the alternative would be driving to the nearest medium-size city); I've never had adverse action as a result of shopping there but I have been called by the Security departments of several credit card companies to verify that Walmart purchases actually were mine.  So in my case it would seem their computers don't consider me high risk from an occasional Walmart purchase but they do consider going to Walmart to be outside my usual pattern.

 

TU 791 02/11/2013, EQ 800 1/29/2011 , EX Plus FAKO 812, EX Vantage Score 955 3/19/2010 wife's EQ 9/23/2009 803
EX always was my highest when we could pull all three
Always remember: big print giveth, small print taketh away
If you dunno what tanstaafl means you must Google it
Message 16 of 24
Uborrow-Upay
Valued Contributor

Re: MY GOAL: Get The AmEx Centurion Card - MY PLAN: read in article


MattH wrote: 

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Banking/HomebuyingGuide/weston-stop-acting-rich-start-getting-rich.aspx

 


MattH, that's a very interesting and appropriate article...can you post that link over in "Credit In The News" for us, too?  I think most forum members would find it interesting.

 

I disagree with the article's conclusion that teachers and engineers are "frugal", though.  While that may be true, it may also be true that they have less of a need to impress others with displays of wealth in the course of  their careers than a real estate salesperson, for instance, or a stockbroker.

 

If a stockbroker wears a suit that's 20 years old, he's not a stockbroker for long because he doesn't look successful, but if an engineer wears a 20 year old suit...nobody notices!  lol

 

Message 17 of 24
Anonymous
Not applicable

Re: MY GOAL: Get The AmEx Centurion Card - MY PLAN: read in article


@Anonymous wrote:

 

There are a lot easier ways to max your spending out than buying and selling crap on ebay and with a lot less risk.

Buy dollar coins from the US mint through their direct ship program and deposit them in your account. The shipping is free, they count as a purchase so you earn cash back.

Google it and you will find mega threads on fatwallet and flyertalk that outline the deal.

I hope you have been using an Amex card that offers cash back like the blue cash card.


Actually, it usually does not count as a purchase, but as a cash advance.  Both Chase and AmEx list the purchase as a cash-like transaction and not only do not award any points, but start charging interest as of the transaction date.

 

USAA does not list the purchase as a cash-like transaction, but they do not award any points because the transaction is flagged as "government services."

Message 18 of 24
Watchmann
Valued Contributor

Re: MY GOAL: Get The AmEx Centurion Card - MY PLAN: read in article


@Anonymous wrote:

@Anonymous wrote:

 

There are a lot easier ways to max your spending out than buying and selling crap on ebay and with a lot less risk.

Buy dollar coins from the US mint through their direct ship program and deposit them in your account. The shipping is free, they count as a purchase so you earn cash back.

Google it and you will find mega threads on fatwallet and flyertalk that outline the deal.

I hope you have been using an Amex card that offers cash back like the blue cash card.


Actually, it usually does not count as a purchase, but as a cash advance.  Both Chase and AmEx list the purchase as a cash-like transaction and not only do not award any points, but start charging interest as of the transaction date.

 

USAA does not list the purchase as a cash-like transaction, but they do not award any points because the transaction is flagged as "government services."


There is an article in the WSJ on Dec 7, 2009 describing how this scheme works.  It's not illegal, but has the whiff of dishonesty about it.  Leave it to our friends in Governmnet to enable a plan to give other peoples money away.  Smiley Indifferent

Message 19 of 24
Anonymous
Not applicable

Re: MY GOAL: Get The AmEx Centurion Card - MY PLAN: read in article


@Watchmann wrote:

@Anonymous wrote:

@Anonymous wrote:

 

There are a lot easier ways to max your spending out than buying and selling crap on ebay and with a lot less risk.

Buy dollar coins from the US mint through their direct ship program and deposit them in your account. The shipping is free, they count as a purchase so you earn cash back.

Google it and you will find mega threads on fatwallet and flyertalk that outline the deal.

I hope you have been using an Amex card that offers cash back like the blue cash card.


Actually, it usually does not count as a purchase, but as a cash advance.  Both Chase and AmEx list the purchase as a cash-like transaction and not only do not award any points, but start charging interest as of the transaction date.

 

USAA does not list the purchase as a cash-like transaction, but they do not award any points because the transaction is flagged as "government services."


There is an article in the WSJ on Dec 7, 2009 describing how this scheme works.  It's not illegal, but has the whiff of dishonesty about it.  Leave it to our friends in Governmnet to enable a plan to give other peoples money away.  Smiley Indifferent


 

Would you happen to have a link?
Message 20 of 24
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