- wireless keyboard on PC packed up
- no i-Link port (whatever that is) on my PC, rendering expensive stolen camcorder useless. Karma, man.
- discovered that memory card in camcorder doesn't work because it has too much memory (double Karma, man), then
- forgot internet bank password, then
- forgot password for memory stick that contains spreadsheet with all my passwords, then
- forgot password protecting the spreadsheet containing all my passwords, so
- locked out on internet bank, then
- replacement password sent to my BlackBerry didn't arrive, because Tooting doesn't appear to have a 3G network yet, then
- poured a large G&T and tried to calm down
On the day after inflation busted 3%, and the humble British £ hit $2, a quick bitch. An Abercrombie & Bitch, in fact.
Before I gave up pretending that I was a young buck, I bought the odd item of yuppie (or more correctly, preppy) kit from A&F’s US website (they weren’t interested in the UK at the time). A t-shirt probably cost around $40, or maybe £25.
Now these goddam yanks are under-dressed and over here, having opened a store some place in the West End where the upper echelons (the sort one sees getting pissed at the Mariners in Rock after a hard day’s jet skiing whilst waiting for their GCSE results) drag their reluctant parents to spend a couple of hundred quid on some pre-wrinkled shirts.
The thing is, A&F have used Gap’s tactic of pricing their UK clothes by simply applying Tip-pex to the price label, changing our $40 US t-shirt into a £40 London t-shirt. Great news for A&F – assuming it cost $4 at the Vietnamese factory gate, the gross profit per shirt shoots up from an already-handsome $36 to a frankly drop-dead-gorgeous $76. Ker-ching.
Being too clever by half, I wondered whether this presented an arbitrage opportunity – why not buy the kit from the US website as before, and sell on at somewhere between the $40 cost in the US and $80 UK selling price?
However, by using internet trickery worthy of the Chinese government, the fiendish yanquis have in fact blocked access to the US website from the UK – no matter how you try it, the only way to access A&F online is on the UK website, which sells half the number of items for twice the price of its US cousin. Try it. Globalisation schmobalisation - this is protectionism, pur et dur.
However, the fact that:
- the moaning bloody Indie seems to have added A&F hating to its already long list of bloody campaigns (running stories on 18 March, 22 March, 23 March (x2) and 25 March), and,
- A&F winds up the swivel-eyed right-wing Christian lunatic fringe Stateside,
leads me to wish these price-gouging greedy seppos all the very best. Caveat preppy emptor.
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