I’ve inquired at enough private golf courses over the last few years to appreciate the difficulty now being experienced by these clubs. What’s remarkable to me is not that initiation fees are being slashed from $35,000 to $5,000, but that anyone was paying $35,000 to begin with. As a nation, we were certainly spending like drunken sailors a few years back when money was, almost literally, growing on trees in homeowners’ backyards. USA Today provides this update on the plight of the American country club.

For $6,000 a year, Tom Bennett enjoyed the privileges of being a member of an exclusive, private golf course in northeast New Jersey. He golfed pristine grounds and reveled in socializing with other duffers.

But last year, Bennett ended his six-year membership at the private Stanton Ridge Golf and Country Club in Whitehouse Station, N.J.

“Cost was part of it, but service had fallen and upkeep was suffering because membership was down, a death spiral if you will,” says Bennett, 48, who runs a financial-management consulting firm in California but still owns a house at the club.

“The recession (hurt) membership, and that affected the social aspect,” Bennett says. “With fewer people and dues, the club didn’t do as good a job taking care of non-golf parts of the course.” As Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and other members of golf’s royalty prepare to tee off at the PGA Championship — the fourth, and final, major championship of 2010 — in Wisconsin next week, the business of golf faces an economic outlook that is sinking like a downhill putt.

From what I’ve seen, clubs are slashing initiation fees but haven’t lowered monthly dues much from where they were just a couple of years ago. While not privy to how a country club manages its finances or what goes through the mind of someone thinking about joining one today, it would seem that the $400 or so a month nut (plus incidentals) is as difficult to crack as a one-time fee in the tens of thousands of dollars.

Tagged with:  






The iPad Economy

In the latest issue of the combined Bloomberg/Businessweek (how’s that going, anyway?) you’ll find this intriguing story about the changing habits of the American consumer.

In March, Ralph Ronzio went to a warehouse in a seedy part of Orange County, California, and watched a man auction off his condo for half what he’d paid for it. Ronzio had bought the place for $329,000 in 2005, when he moved to Southern California from Rhode Island to take a job at a data-storage company. It was the first place he’d ever owned.

“It was totally my bachelor pad,” he says. “Not much inside other than the usual leather couch and the big screen TV. My fiancée made me sell the couch.”

That wasn’t the only thing that changed when Ronzio got engaged. His fiancée had two young children, and there wasn’t enough room in the condo for all four of them. So last year, Ronzio bought a house nine miles (14 kilometers) away and they all moved in. He figured he could rent the condo and cover his costs. He figured wrong, Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its Aug. 2 issue.

The more he thought about the money he was losing, the more it stressed him out. Finally, Ronzio enlisted the help of a firm called You Walk Away and did exactly that from the remaining $319,000 on his condo mortgage. When the bank foreclosed, he says he felt a sense of relief. He also had more cash. He and his fiancée took the kids to Disneyland. Ronzio, 31, gave himself a treat as well.

“I bought myself an iPad,” he says.

They once used to say, “what’s more important than the five percent unemployed not spending money is how the other 95 percent do spend theirs”. Apparently, only the numbers have changed as you”ll read about accountant Lucy Johnston not having as many “full-on spa days” anymore while staying at the Bellagio in Las Vegas and how people are buying store brand toothpaste but still getting their daily $4 Starbucks fix.

We’re not making much progress in moving away from a consumption-based economy.

Tagged with:  

The Conference Board reported that consumer confidence dropped to a five-month low, down from an upwardly revised 54.3 in June to 50.4 in July, as Americans worried about a weak job market and a faltering economy.

Both the present situation and the expectations indexes fell, the former dropping from 26.8 to 26.1, the latter tumbling from 72.7 to 66.6. Those saying jobs are hard to get rose from 43.5 percent to 45.8 percent and the outlook for income continued to decline, those saying they are likely to see higher wages in six months falling from 10.6 percent to 10.0 percent.

Tagged with:  

It’s not clear exactly how they went about picking the photos that went along with this USA Today story about how American consumerism is (thankfully) finally beginning to change. But, surely they took more than two pictures of the subject Hundley family and had a better choice than the one you see below of young Brian Hundley.

The report discusses how we Americans are changing our spending habits, for example, buying items like $6,500 outdoor pizza ovens to go alongside our ginormous outdoor grills instead of gaudy jewelry and Mediterranean cruises. But, it’s not hard to come to the conclusion that either the story’s author or editor don’t quite think that’s enough.

Tagged with:  

Jake over at EconomPicData illustrates the remarkable decline in outstanding consumer credit over the last few years, the latest evidence coming in yesterday’s $9.1 billion decline in May and the downward revision in April from +$1 billion to -$14.9 billion.

Despite recent assertions in the financial media that Americans are going back to their spendthrift ways and will support U.S. economic growth in the future as they’ve done in the past – by spending money they don’t have – the consumer is clearly retrenching.

Tagged with:  

A Setback for Retail Sales

Well, today should be another fun-filled Friday for financial markets, what with more talk of a double-dip recession by economic pundits after today’s roundly disappointing retail sales report, adding to the change in momentum of last Friday’s weak labor report. The consensus forecast for May was a small gain but shoppers pulled back sharply instead.

The Commerce Department reported that after an upwardly revised gain of 0.6 percent in April, retail sales fell 1.2 percent in May, paced by a 9.3 percent drop at building material stores. Plunging sales at Home Depot and Lowes no doubt had something to do with the expiration of both the government’s appliance rebate program and homebuyer tax credit.

Tagged with:  
Page 3 of 612345...Last »
© 2010-2011 The Mess That Greenspan Made