Note: On January 8, 2015 American Express sent out a notice to a large number of Bluebird & Serve cardholders informing them that loading capabilities on their accounts had been terminated. For more information, see: Amex kills Bluebird and Serve for manufactured spend
I don’t know how long it will last, but as of the time of this writing it is possible to manufacture credit card spend for free (see “Better than free manufactured spend“). This means that you can collect points and miles for free. You can meet minimum spend requirements for free. You can earn high spend bonuses for free (see “Best Big Spend Bonuses“). Sometimes you can even make a profit while collecting points this way.
In the past I’ve often compared various manufactured spend techniques by calculating the cost per point of each technique. Now, though, the cost per point is zero or less. It’s time to look for a new comparative metric.
Bluebird as a limited resource
Currently, I’d argue that American Express’ Bluebird product is the single best and easiest way to turn Visa gift cards and Vanilla Reload cards into cash. Vanilla Reload cards can be loaded to your Bluebird account online via the site vanillareload.com. Visa gift cards can be loaded to your Bluebird account at Walmart stores via “swipe reloads” (see “Gift card PINs“). Both techniques for unloading the cards are free.
Importantly, Bluebird limits reloads to $5000/month per person (swipe reloads and Vanilla reloads combined). So, I think that a useful new metric is to compare techniques with Bluebird’s $5000/month limit in mind. Which combination of credit card, gift card, portal, and gift card merchant results in the most value for $5000 per month in spend?
The Bluebird Metric
Here’s how the Bluebird Metric works:
For each technique, calculate the following for $5K of manufactured spend:
- Calculate out of pocket cost. For example:
- If you buy 10 $500 Visa gift cards, each with a $5.95 fee then out of pocket cost = 10 x $5.95 = $59.50
- Estimate the cost of your time, gas to drive to/from Walmart, and car wear and tear.
- Calculate credit card value
- # Points earned via credit card (or cash back earned)
- Value of points earned via credit card
- Estimated cash value of other benefits earned (e.g. “Travel Together ticket”, elite status, etc.)
- Calculate value of other rewards
- # Points earned via other means (e.g. fuel points from grocery store, points from online portal, etc.)
- Value of points earned via other means
- Cash earned via non-credit card means (cash back portals, for example)
- Add up all of the above benefits and subtract all of the costs.
In the end, you should have an estimate of the total value of $5000 worth of manufactured spend. This value can be compared across multiple manufactured spend techniques to help decide which is best.
To help calculate all of this, I created a Google Docs spreadsheet and entered in a number of different scenarios. Here is what I found:
Grocery 2X vs. 5X
The example below shows two similar scenarios. In both cases, the idea is to manufacture spend by buying $500 Visa gift cards at a grocery store and then liquidate them through Bluebird at Walmart. The biggest difference between the two scenarios is that one uses a credit card that earns 2X at grocery stores and the other earns 5X.
The samples above show an estimated value of manufacturing $5000 in spend. In my experience, Kroger awards fuel points for gift card purchases. For me, fuel points are worth about 1 cent each, but the value for you would depend completely on how much you fill your gas tank (and/or friend’s gas tanks) each time (see “What is a fuel point worth?“). Next to “Estimate other costs” I entered “$50” to cover the cost/time/pain of visiting Walmart several times in a month. Everyone has different circumstances that would warrant very different values here.
The two columns above vary by credit card: The Amex PRG (Premier Rewards Gold) card (which earns 2X at gas and grocery stores) vs. the Citibank ThankYou Preferred card (the one that earns 5X at groceries, drug stores, and gas stations for the first year). For the PRG card, I entered a very conservative value of 1.29 cents per point (based on the estimated Fair Trading Price). For the Citi card, I entered a value of 1.33 cents per point (see “ThankYou!“). The PRG card earns a big spend bonus of 15,000 points after $30K spend, so I entered that in as well. Note that the calculations assume that once the big spend bonus is achieved, the card will no longer be used in the same calendar year.
Overall, you can see that the net estimated benefit of manufacturing $5K of spend in this way would be $101 for the PRG card vs. a whopping $273 for the Citi card.
Let’s look at other examples…
Vanilla Reload cards 1X vs. 1.1X vs. 5X
In this scenario, I compared three cards:
The American Express SPG (Starwood Preferred Guest) card earns only one point per dollar. My Chase Freedom card earns 1.1 points per dollar thanks to the annual 10% bonus I get for having a Chase checking account (see “The new king of the Ultimate Rewards Mall“). And, my Citi ThankYou Preferred card earns 5X at drug stores for the first year (Details here). With the estimated values I plugged in, you can see that only the 5X scenario results in much gain.
Office Supply Stores
Here are my estimates for the value of buying $200 Visa gift cards at office supply stores with a card that earns 5X:
The only difference between the two columns above is that I used the conservative Fair Trading Price of 1.31 cents per point for the left-hand column, and I used a much higher 2 cent per point estimate for the right-hand column. With the 1.31 cents per point value, this approach results in $88 of value per month. The 2 cents per point option results in a whopping $261 of value per month.
Cash Back Portals
In my recent post “Better than free manufactured spend” I showed that it was possible to earn money when manufacturing spend by going through a cash back portal to GiftCardMall to buy $1000 Visa gift cards. I also pointed out that you could earn even more money by getting cash back buying Amex gift cards, and then get more cash back by using those Amex gift cards to buy Visa gift cards. The table below shows the value of the first approach (buying $1K Visa cards at GiftCardMall) and just the incremental value of adding on the step of buying American Express gift cards:
Basically what this shows is that there is decent value to be had by manufacturing spend via GiftCardMall, but the incremental benefit of buying Amex gift cards is pretty small. I don’t think it’s worth the extra hassle.
Note that the Amex gift card column is just an estimate of the value you would get per $5000. In reality, you probably wouldn’t buy cards with exactly $2500 in value (a number I used for convenience to fit the spreadsheet). In fact, that would be an inconvenient amount if the purpose was to use them to buy $1000 Visa gift cards. In reality, one might buy Amex gift cards each with $3K in value and use them to buy Visa gift cards with values of just under $1K each (in order to account for fees).
Note also that the Amex gift card approach can be mixed with other manufactured spend approaches. For example, you can use the Amex gift cards to buy Visa gift cards at grocery stores. So, you can estimate that the added value of doing this (if you were going to use a 1X card anyway) would be about $39 per month. Again, its probably not worth the effort for most people.
Your Miles May Will Vary
The estimated value of each manufactured spend approach shown above is highly dependent upon my situation: how much I value different types of points, which credit cards I own, how much I dislike visiting Walmart, etc. The numbers will be more meaningful if you plug in your own estimates and even add new scenarios.
Here is the Google Docs spreadsheet:
To make changes, you will need your own copy. Do the following from the opened spreadsheet:
- Select File… Make a Copy.
- Give the new file a distinctive name so that you can tell it apart from mine.
Note that the blue cells are ones that should be edited to fit your circumstances. Red cells are calculated automatically from the others so its best to leave those alone.
Conclusion
Its interesting to see that manufacturing spend is probably not worth the hassle except under certain circumstances:
- You are working towards a big spend bonus that you find especially valuable.
- You need to meet minimum spend requirements for new credit card sign-ups.
- You can earn a high multiple through category bonuses (e.g. 5X is very good)
- You have specific award redemptions in mind that are worth more than 1 to 2 cents per point
What do you think of the Bluebird Metric? Is it a good way to evaluate various manufactured spend techniques? Are there better or simpler options?