Cutting back

Last night I played cards at my Wednesday night poker match.  There are seven of us and we always seem to have a good time.  Sadly, I am usually a modest looser and last night was no different.  Lost $8.  A couple of my friends take it pretty seriously and I suppose I should too.  After All, eight bucks is a significant percentage loss from my $20 buy-in.

Between deals I heard about neighbor’s financial plights.  At least three acquaintances are selling their golf club memberships.  One supposedly lost $5 million in the Madoff mess.  He is also now trying to sell his house.  Another friend lost $700,000 in a hedge fund and they are considering moving back north.  Everyone seems to be cutting back.  No one is immune from this mess.

  • We have downgraded our golf club membership to social or house.  We won’t have use of the pool when grand kids come down but we have a pretty big ocean five minutes away with one of the country’s most beautiful beaches.
  • We go to Costco less and less.  It seems a trip to Costco for chicken always builds into a couple of hundred dollars.  On the way to the register I will pick up $10 cashews,  a $6 case of clementines, five or six bottles of wine for $11 each , a $16 hard cover best seller for Pam,  $9 frozen shrimps, $8 for four pounds of butter….it goes on and on.  When I get home I put all the perishables into the extra refrigerator we had to buy to store all this crap.  No more!  Pulled the plug on the ice box.
  • I now buy my gas at Hess. They have a no-fee credit card that gives me 10% off gas for the first ninety days and 5% thereafter.  Exxon has a similar card.
  • We take better care of our two cars.  They have to last. When its warm I wash them myself.  I even enjoy it.
  • We dropped out of the wine club.  I had become almost notorious for sipping too many samples at their tastings and ordering a case of everything.  I loved it when the wine was delivered and then stacking the bottles in my library.  The $500-$600 bills would come in a month later and I would swear off wine for a week.  Or a day.  I now buy large jugs of junk wines at the grocery store.
  • Starbucks is right up the street but I haven’t been in there for two years.  McDonald’s new coffee recipe is terrific and I overcame my shyness about asking for a “senior coffee”.  Painful at first, I now boast about paying forty-nine cents for the best coffee in town.
  • My wife won’t go to Wal-Mart with me.  But I have been going there for a couple of years to shop for groceries.  I have a sister who berates me for letting this company profit from child labor, etc.  She has a point, of course, but how do I simply avoid the savings they offer?  Over the last year I see more and more people who look and dress like me shopping there.  I don’t have to speak Spanish to the Wal-Mart help anymore. Most of the employees are folks like me.  And since the Mexican reverse migration began I notice a reduction in Mexican food offerings.  Something I miss.

So, everyone is cutting back.  Everyone.  And the result is lower consumer spending, a higher savings rate and a lower stock market.  We will still get bear market rallies in stocks but I don’t see the trend changing for a while.  What are you doing to cut back expenses?