Mid-Week Mini: The Gamble That Saved FedEx
In this week’s Mid-Week Mini Episode, we talk about how the future of FedEx was once saved by a trip to the casino.

Sometimes the difference between success and failure comes down to one risky decision. In the early days of FedEx, that decision reportedly happened at a blackjack table in Las Vegas.
The story begins with Frederick W. Smith, the founder of FedEx. Smith had first proposed the idea for overnight package delivery while he was a student at Yale University in the 1960s. His concept was simple but revolutionary – a network of planes that would fly packages to a central hub overnight, sort them quickly, and then fly them back out so they could arrive the next morning. Today that sounds normal, but at the time it was a completely new way of thinking about logistics.
Smith launched Federal Express in 1971 and began building that system, choosing Memphis as the central hub. The company officially started operations in April 1973 with fourteen small Dassault Falcon 20 jets delivering packages to 25 cities. The technology worked, but the business model was brutally expensive. Planes had to fly whether they were full or half empty, fuel costs were high, and the company was losing roughly a million dollars every month.
By 1974, the company was nearly out of money. At one point, Federal Express reportedly had about $5,000 left in its accounts, while it needed roughly $24,000 just to buy jet fuel for the next week’s flights. Smith spent days trying to secure emergency funding from investors and banks, but nothing came through fast enough.
So he made a desperate move. Smith withdrew the company’s remaining cash and flew to Las Vegas. According to his later interviews, he sat down at a blackjack table – a game where skill and probability can slightly improve a player’s odds compared to most casino games. Over the course of the night, he played several hours of blackjack and managed to turn that last five thousand dollars into about $27,000.
It wasn’t a massive win by casino standards, but it was exactly what the company needed. That money paid for jet fuel and kept the planes flying for another week. During that extra time, Smith was able to secure new financing, eventually raising about $11 million in investment that stabilized the company.
Today FedEx is one of the largest logistics companies in the world, moving millions of packages every day and generating tens of billions in revenue each year. The Memphis hub Smith built is now one of the busiest cargo airports on Earth.
And if the story is true, one of the most important companies in modern shipping survived because its founder won just enough money playing blackjack in Las Vegas. It’s probably not a strategy they teach in business school – but sometimes the stories that sound the most unbelievable turn out to be real.
And sometimes, the internet says it’s true.
The Internet Says It’s True Book: https://amzn.to/4lNy2oQ
Review this podcast at https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-internet-says-it-s-true/id1530853589
Bonus episodes and content available at http://Patreon.com/MichaelKent
For special discounts and links to our sponsors, visit http://theinternetsaysitstrue.com/deals



