End of month review - June 2008
July 6, 2008One thing is for sure - reviewing last month’s financial odyssey is not going to be fun. On the other hand, I suppose I should be thankful for keeping such a close eye on my money since otherwise I would have never noticed the appalling truth. Or learnt from it. My point is:
I am now worse off than three months ago.
Despite three months’ salary and pension contributions my net worth is below the March level. I’m absolutely shocked and even a little unhappy since I enjoy seeing the progress bar increase (as opposed to decrease by nearly 2% this month)!
At least I have a pretty good idea what led to this fiasco: an orange coat, a digital piano and a trip to the Caribbean. In hindsight, would I commit these “sins” again? Maybe, yes and yes. The coat, I fully admit, was an impulse buy and a very expensive one at that. Yes I needed a coat, but no it didn’t have to be that one. On the other hand, I still love it as much as I did the minute I walked out of the shop with it and have so far not seen a single person (other than me) wearing it. In a city like London that’s pretty impressive
My piano purchase was an even larger expense than the coat and by no means an impulse buy. In fact, since leaving home I had told my parents I would take my piano with me as soon as I had finished University and had a permanent place to live. Unfortunately it turned out to be prohibitively expensive to ship an item like a piano from Germany to the UK. Hence I decided to get a digital piano in the meantime so that I could start playing (and practising!) again after having not touched a single key during my undergrad studies. The model I ended up getting was only half as much as the Yamaha Clavinova I had set my heart on previously and I got it for £100 less during an end-of-season sale. Regrets? None.
And finally, my holidays. One week on Grenada, a tiny little Caribbean island just north of Trinidad and Tobago. Flights and hotel together came to just over £400 and despite regular dinners out, numerous activities on the island and a day at a local spa, the holiday was definitely on the cheap side. Considering it was the Caribbean anyway
Again, I don’t regret this trip at all. On the contrary, I would have happily stayed and travelled much further and for much longer than I was able to. The numerous once-in-a-lifetime memories made it worth every penny.
Regardless of whether I consider this money well spent, it’s time to stop. I am basically exactly where I was three months ago, so for the next quarter I will need to curb my spending in order to get my growth and progress back on track. Given that the house market is still in a pretty bad place, I probably won’t need my deposit money for at least another six months. But by then I definitely will need to have accumulated enough to make this (temporary!) backdrop in net worth unnoticeable.
If you have kept a close eye on my progress page you will notice that I redistributed some of my money between the various goals. I depleted my emergency fund in favour of allocating more money to the house deposit and I also shifted more money into the account intended to cover the outstanding bill I have with my parents. The latter is now fully funded, while my deposit has grown to 70% of my initial goal of £20,000.
Given that we’re halfway through the year, it’s once again time to have a look at how well my budget is working out. The good news is that my interest income reached 73% of my goal for 2008 by the end of June, indicating that my savings are working hard for me while I sleep
This is even better news when you consider that this goal was revised upwards twice already this year: from £200 to £300 to its current value of £600. I decided to change it once more to £750, which is definitely fairly ambitious given that I received the interest from a fixed one-year term monthly saver account when it matured in June (hence half of that interest was technically already earned last year).
In the interest of brevity, I will only list the remaining changes to the budget (since I don’t deem them noteworthy enough to dedicate an entire paragraph to each):
- Utilities: new category with £350 since it took our utility provider more than 7 months to get our bill sorted and we hadn’t paid anything until they finally managed to get organised
- Landline: slightly up from £90 to £100 based on usage
- Mobile: down from £220 to £180 based on usage
- Groceries: slightly up from £1,400 to £1,500 - inflation is kicking in
- Dining out: down from £1,000 to £900 to accommodate the increase in food prices
- Clothes: up from £1,000 to £1,200 with the best intentions to undercut it
- Gifts: up from £750 to £1,000 (I’m too generous for my own good)
- Hairdresser / Manicure: up from £500 to £600
- Drinks: pooled with the Category “Clubbing” hence total down from £250 to £200
- Cinema: up from £50 to £100
- Health Insurance supplement: up from £60 to £65 - I blame the bad £/€ exchange rate
- Gym: Down from £360 to £150 because I cancelled my membership
- Contact lenses: Up from £200 to £500 as an eye infection forced me to change my prescription to the more expensive daily disposable lenses
- Life Insurance: Up from £900 to £950 due to £/€ exchange rate
- Broadband: Down from £100 to £90 as we are on a fixed subscription
- Charity: Up from £120 to £150
- Planes: Down from £900 to £800 as my one major holiday is already accounted for
- Holiday Accommodation: Up from £300 to £500 due to major naivety on my part (initially)
That’s all from me for now. Progress page and “Best Of” section have been updated as usual.

















I'm still amazed you got a holiday in Caribbean for
Frugal Trenches | July 7, 2008 | 6:05 pmI’m still amazed you got a holiday in Caribbean for £400!!! HOW??
I didn’t see rent or mortgage on your list.
Hope the next 3 months are better! You’ve done very well to get to 73% of your goal!
I'm subscribing to the Travelzoo newsletter, which gives you a
Kirsten | July 7, 2008 | 10:18 pmI’m subscribing to the Travelzoo newsletter, which gives you a weekly round up of the best travel deals on the web. And one morning I opened the email and found return flights to Grenada for £200 with XL Airways. Since I don’t mind flying “no-frills” and I was flexible in terms of dates (the deal was only available on a set number of departure dates), I booked straight away. Finding accommodation for 2 people for £400 (combined, i.e. £200 each) wasn’t that difficult either… simple search on Hotels.com…
The budget list doesn’t include all my categories, but only the ones that have seen changes as part of the mid-year update. Since the lease on my flat is for a 2 year duration, the rent is stable and a (properly) fixed expense and hence was omitted from the list.