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How
to live beyond your means
Even when you're spending money you don't have,
there are savvy ways to stretch your cash.
Most articles about personal finance preach a gospel of thrift,
advising readers to save and plan and pay down debt. Reckless
consumption is a serpent to be shunned.
Sometimes, though, you just don't want to hear
another sermon about Sound Financial Planning.
So if you're looking for practical advice about
getting your financial house in order, stop reading now. This
is a story about sinning and getting away with it.
Does that mean you should live fast and leave
a beautiful corpse? Not really. But here are a few ideas on
getting good stuff, going places in style, and being prepared
for the day the bill comes.
Learn to shop
Ditch the khakis and denim button-downs haute couture
no longer means expensive. The reason is fashion arbitrage,
the art of spotting and exploiting inconsistent prices in
different markets.
For example, normal prices at New York-based
Barney's can be laugh-out-loud outrageous, with $1,000 cotton
sweaters and the like. But twice a year in New York and Los
Angeles, the upscale retailer hosts "warehouse"
sales at locations away from its main branches.
There, the discounts start deep and get more
aggressive over the sale's two-week run. Examples: a silk-and-cashmere
jacket by Zegna marked down from $1,400 to $150; Ferragamo
shoes, once $400, walk out the door at $89.
Another option for serious shoppers are the
sales hosted by a group of women calling themselves the Billion-dollar
Babes, at which prices can drop as low as 80 percent below
retail.
The events take place a few times a year in
Los Angeles, Las Vegas, and New York, and feature a glittering
array of designers. Besides the ubiquitous Fendi, Gucci and
Prada, participants have included brands that are less frequently
seen discounted, like Vivienne Westwood, Helmut Lang, and
Jimmy Choo.
Can't get to a coast? There's always the Web,
where discounts sprout faster than you can say "production
overrun." Check out a site from Italy called Yoox.com.
It sells high-end clothing at low-end prices. Beloved by European
fashionistas since 2000, Yoox began shipping to Americans
last year.
Suburban Chicago hosts a different sort of
shop-til-you-drop festival: the ritziest rummage sales on
earth. Two Winnetka churches, the Congregational and Christ
Church, annually vie for the title "biggest" (certified
by Guinness), but each offers an impressive selection of wares
from affluent North Shore locals.
There are rooms devoted to everything: handbags,
handkerchiefs, treasures, and furs," said Murph Henderson,
a frequent attendee. "The selection runs the gamut from
super high end to K-mart."
'Rent' -- don't buy
Automobiles. You want to drive a fancy car, but don't have
a fancy budget? Leasing is the answer. The best option is
to get a second lease leasing a car that's already
been leased once before. This way, you'll drive a car that's
been "gently used" but your debt obligations will
be much lower than to lease a brand-new vehicle.
If you go for a model whose design hasn't changed
much recently say, a two-year-old Lexus -- many people
won't even notice that the car's model year is not quite au
courant.
Article continued at http://money.cnn.com/2003/09/22/pf/
saving/beyond_your_means/index.htm
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