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What Rich People Don't Want You to Know About Their Spending
Hide the Hermès orange and the Tiffany blue—today's wealthy consumers are asking for unmarked bags to disguise their luxury purchases. The Daily Beast investigates.
Last week, Kathleen Fuld, wife of Lehman Brothers C.E.O. Dick Fuld, stopped by the Hermès boutique on Manhattan’s Madison Avenue to buy some holiday gifts. As she paid for her purchases, she vetoed the store’s signature orange bag and asked for a plain white one instead.
It’s become a common request, an Hermès employee told The Daily Beast. Sales associates at this temple of good taste have gotten used to passing out plain white shopping bags to clients eager to hide their $10,000 Birkin habits in the current economic environment.
Mrs. Fuld has been a regular client, visiting the boutique once a week and spending $5,000 or $10,000 each time. But now, she doesn’t want any one to know.
At Hermès and a handful of other exclusive retailers, “secret shopping” has becoming the winter season’s newest trend. Anyone who can still afford, say, the three cashmere throws at $2,225 each that Mrs. Fuld bought when she stopped by the store that day isn’t likely to advertise it. Instead, the city’s most extravagant shoppers are ferrying their purchases home in unmarked bags; delegating delivery to assistants; or manipulating credit card bills to disguise their spending from outsiders—and their spouses.
“We kind of respect it,” says the sales associate, who’s worked at the store for several years and sees a white bag twice a day now, up from once a month in August. Skipping the trademark citrus bag, with its thick paper, brown cord handles, and logo, Hermès’ biggest spenders are “trying to be discreet.”
Indeed. Since the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy, Mrs. Fuld has still been a regular client, visiting the boutique once a week and spending $5,000 or $10,000 each time, says the associate. Now, she doesn’t want any one to know. (Through a spokesperson, Mrs. Fuld declined to comment on this article.)
Typically, brown paper bags conceal contraband—alcohol, pornographic magazines. Have luxury goods become the new dirty little secret among the ultra rich?
“People are feeling guilty and they’re feeling confused and they’re feeling like they didn’t earn their money, especially within the financial community,” says Milton Pedraza, C.E.O. of the Luxury Institute, a market research company for purveyors of luxury goods and services.
Pedraza has heard of several retailers offering plain packaging, or shipping in unmarked boxes, including Net-A-Porter, the online designer boutique that traffics in labels such as Chloé, Missoni, and Jimmy Choo. (The company didn’t return a call to confirm.) A quick trip to Tiffany confirmed that the Fifth Avenue store in Manhattan has white bags available too, although a salesperson there said the store has offered them, as an alternative to the classic blue bags, for at least seven years.









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What kind of bitch buys a snake skin bag?She should be ashamed of herself for more than just how much it cost.Ridiculous.
I love it. Mrs. Fuld doesn't want us to know. Guess we all know now. She must be livid this morning, someone who knows she shops there ratted on her to the media. PS. Mrs. Fuld, we also need you to donate to food banks for out of work Americans who can't put groceries on the table this holiday season. For whom much is given, much is asked...
Isn't it nice to know that the Fulds still have enough cash left to go shopping and support our economy after Dick bankrupted Lehman Brothers.
I only hope that Mrs Fuld has an enjoyable time spending my retirement money.
This article is amazing to me. If they feel the need to hide it then they shouldn't be buying it.
I just wanna know how to get rich enough to want to hide my spending. Right now, I'm just worried about hiding from my creditors.
Dance Monkey Dance
How to get rich enough? Then you should have voted for McCain/Stupid and then it would have been business as usual and you too could have started sticking it to the American people like the last 8 years have done.
I have a very secret solution, which I will give out now -- for free! -- to those ashamed of their luxury purposes. It is even better than taking your purchases home in a bag without a logo.
Don't buy these things!
Take that $1,200.00 for the snakeskin bag and donate it to a foodbank. Or go to Heifer International, and buy an ark of animals (exactly $1,200.00 for a pair each of around a dozen different species) for a community where it will help feed and clothe an entire village.
That will feel even better than a snakeskin bag on your arm, and you can brag about it proudly.
"People are feeling guilty and they're feeling confused and they're feeling like they didn't earn their money???
NO they are NOT. These people are as bad as terrorists!
Did you know that Christies recently had a sale/auction of fulds art collection...Who got that money? Seems his wife! GROSS GROSS GROSS...HORRIBLE!!!!
@ Talvallai posted my initial reaction to the article perfectly, but then I thought about it a bit. You can be sure that, thanks to articles like this one, Mrs. Fuld has finally begun to earn her ill-gotten gain . . . her new job is to saddled with a surname that shall live in infamy. Surely she is allowed to find some cold comfort in a Birkin and a few pashminas with a clear conscience now.
I weep for the people with these kind of "hardships". Gimme a break.
Sort of like this comment in the NYT's
8. December 15th,
2008
I read nowhere about the pressure Mr Madoff must have felt for many years. He knew the day of reckoning would rear its ugly head. How about some pity for him.
- Posted by Bobby Bryce
I agree that Mrs. Fuld in particular, should keep hiding her purchases. But as for the wealthy who do not have the blood of a large company going under on their hands, shop as much and as openly as you want. This is America folks, and if you've got it, you're free to spend it.
What a pathetic little person Mrs Fuld is- she didn't earn a dime, and neither did her husband! Stealing isn't earning. And if she still has cash she needs to be in the Second Harvesters warehouse doing something constructive.
I hope those Hermes Birkin bags are tender when she blows all the money and has to eat them. What goes around comes around and she'll be back in Omaha or where ever with no clue how to live like a normal person.
Court ordered Wal Mart would be a good idea for these type of people. Seeing how the other 99% live would be a shock, but might drive home the reality of whose money she throws away at Hermes. Like MINE!!! Her amoral husband and associates stole my one Birkin bag hopes (who needs more than one?) and she's sneaking home with cashmere throws?
Horrible little people.
We should not be jealous. Karma can be a b.i.t.c.h.
There is an old saying: "Your last shirt does not have any pockets!"
Live your life good, do right by others and don't forget your neighbor during these hard times.
I hope she realizes that the shame she feels is honest and true and in keeping with what she should feel in a world full of struggling and starving people. I hope she continues to feel ashamed to the point where she realizes there really is much more satisfaction in giving and investing in one's fellow man (or creature..) (or environment).
It is partly people like this full-of-herself Fuld who have brought America to her knees. I'm sure she had no problem egging on her husband to buy her more, more, more: And I'm sure he had no problems with demanding greater compensation while holding little accountability. As long as a quick buck is made, everything is right, right?
In the meantime, the rest of America is losing jobs, homes, and healthcare. While people who have helped bring the nation down are virtually crapping on us--and laughing while they're at it. Here we are, with our future generations paying for the bailout of these irresponsible people at this very moment just so they can continue to shop unimpeded.
This madness has to stop. NO MORE CORPORATE WELFARE! If these people don't remember a little event called "the French Revolution" from their prep school/Ivy textbooks, we the American people ought to bring this lesson home!
I think it is absolutely sick that America's wannabe aristocracy deigns to preach RESPONSIBILITY to the rest of us when they show no sign of self control. It is because of people like her, her greedy husband, and the rest of Wall Street that America is down in the dumps. We will be paying for the bailout--all necessitated by the irresponsible handling and greed--for years and generations to come. We will be worrying about healthcare, jobs and our mortgages while people like the Fulds dump on us while laughing. America, ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!
Mrs. Fuld is skulking around when buying expensive gifts. Better that she take her "ill-gotten" money and support a local charity instead. She could hold her head higher if she did something to give back (literally) to those affected by the plight her husband and other CEOs created. I have NO sympathy for the rich and arrogant Wall Streeters suffing from the "rainmaker syndrome" of self-importance...and denial.
Can we please just cut off their heads? How come folks had the balls to do that a couple hundred years ago but not anymore? These people do not deserve to walk the earth. If they're feeling so fucking guilty, I've got an idea--give their unearned, undeserved money to some folks who need it, there's plenty of them.
One of the sure signs of addiction is hiding your behavior. These are not happy people. They are people who need increasingly expensive items to convince to gratify some need. It's about time we stopped idolizing people in such a sad state as though their things really do make them special. They truly don't.
^ Yes. The compulsiveness of it all is so obvious, as is the pathetic unhappiness underlying it all. 3k throws... WTF? Are they serious? Serious neuroses at play here, but then again, the pursuit of wealth to the exclusion of all else, it's deification, is itself an illness. Why so many aspire to it is a mystery
And to think of the good that might be done with the money this woman pisses away to satisfy some neurotic need; 3k will feed alot of mutts at the shelter, or help fund a foodbank etc etc etc, but of course this narcissistic bitch would never think of the greater good.
Dear Mrs. Fuld.
I am sorry that you must sneak your purchases home so no one knows how much you are spending. I hope that the people who receive these gifts appreciate how hard it was for you to buy them, and how awful it was for you in doing it. I pray that that expensive comforter keeps you warm and toasty as you struggle with the cold in your mansion in front of the roaring fire. Enjoy your twelve course Christmas meal that will be prepared for you by someone else.
I can sympathsize. This year most of my Christmas presents were difficult to get and I also had to sneak them home so no one would know. You see, even Wal-mart was a little out of my reach this year. I want my family to believe that Christmas is still Christmas, and Santa will come, so I spent much of the last few months combing flea markets, thrift shops, and yard sales so that I could provide my family with a nice holiday. I got lucky this year. I found several items that had never been used, probably donated by individuals who themselves received them as gifts but didn't want them. I purchased books that didn't look very used. Plus, I have put many hours into repairing a few items, turning them into nice little hand made gifts for just a dollar or two for paint and glue. I saved most of what little money I had to purchase new only the essentials like clothing. Christmas stockings will be stuffed with deodorant, toothpaste, and other items we need to buy anyway. And a few pieces of candy. They will be full. Hopefully they won't be too disappointed that the new electronics they dreamed of aren't there. They are learning not to dream.
We are going to have a nice Christmas dinner, thanks to the Angel Food Network. I have been saving what I could out of each box that I purchased and have a nice stockpile of chicken filets, mixed vegetables, and frozen pies. I even have managed to save enough to invite my next door neighbors over to share festivities with us. The company that they both worked for went belly up recently, and they are hoarding their cash to keep their house, and to keep their house warm this winter. The thrift shops provided nice presents for them as well.
I will get up very early on Christmas to begin preparing the meal, finding ways to disguise such mundane fare as an exotic Christmas feast. I have already cracked and roasted the nuts that I gathered outside of town, and sold enough of them to buy fresh greens for a salad. And everyone will get a big orange this year.
So, Mrs.Fuld, I wish you a Merry Christmas indeed. And a Happy New Year too.
signed The Rest of Us
Now a confession. This letter is actually a conglomeration of the experiences of several of the people around me. I did, however, make most of my purchases from thrift shops. I have been doing this for years. The gift baskets that I make have become something to look forward to, and I manage to make them for just dollars a gift. I had to, because it has been a long time since I could afford to spend more than five or ten dollars on each person. Of course, it means that I work on Christmas gifts all year. A lot of time goes in to living frugally. And the Angel Food Network is playing a great role in our Christmas Feast. Plus those neighbors, I bought them Angel Boxes too. They didn't have the thirty dollars needed to make the purchase. I am a little luckier than them.
I have always been taught that hiding what you are doing is a sure fire sign that you are doing something wrong. Why not consider returning that cashmere throw. That 12 hundred dollars would pay for Angel boxes to keep ten families eating for a month, since each box is packed to feed a family of four for one week. Then you could give the recipient a card stating that these families were being fed in their name, and maybe even would continue to be fed for one year. Then you wouldn't have the embarrassment of having to hide anything, and I am sure that last years cashmere throw will still be warm.
You have to understand why people are angry. No matter how you justify it, the priveledge that you enjoy now was amassed at the expense of a great many who struggle to keep what they have. Nobody is self made. Nobody has a natural right to priveledge. And nobody deserves a life of ease after taking advantage of so many others. The least you could do is carry the orange bag and let those others cut loose with the tomatoes.
Thank you.
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