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Ballantyne Resort is inviting guests to experience life in the fast lane with its new Speed and Luxury Package. Speed comes in a 2006 Maser- ati Quattroporte, in which guests will be chauffeured around throughout their stay. (The base price on those wheels is $105,000 and the average sticker price runs between $120,000 and $130,000, said Bob Wyont, a salesman at Foreign Cars Italia in Charlotte.) Luxury means accommoda- tions in the Presidential Suite and a four-course dinner cooked in your suite by one of the re- sort’s chefs. Other luxuries: a round of golf and one-hour spa treatment per guest. The finish- ing touch is breakfast in bed the following morning. “This is a great example of ways we are trying to differen- tiate ourselves as the only resort in Charlotte,” said Christina Ar- geris, a Starwood Preferred Guest account manager for Bal- lantyne Resort. But quick, grab your credit card, because Speed and Luxury don’t come cheap. The price for one night is $3,000. Ballantyne Resort is partner- ing with Foreign Cars Italia to of- fer the Speed and Luxury Pack- age. For more information, call (704) 248-4000 or go to www.luxurycollection.com/Bal- lantyne. If you hurry, you can be the first to try out the package, which the hotel began promot- ing only this year. So far there have been no bookings, Argeris said. AMY BALDWIN Contact MoneyWise with your ideas for upmarket features: (704) 358-5166; [email protected] Resort package designed to meet need for speed, luxury COURTESY OF JAMES J. BISSELL THAT’S RICH A LOOK AT HOW THE OTHER HALF SPLURGES Spa opens at airport Options for shopping and relaxing at Charlotte/Douglas keep going upscale. GOING AWAY, 2D Flu planning goes to work Law firms, HR advisers tell Charlotte employers to make plans in case of a mass outbreak. GETTING AHEAD, 3D Million-dollar idea Think there’s no room online for little guys to make a buck? Columnist John McBride introduces Alex Tew. TECHLIFE, 6D New Charlotte.com features Today, read Gillian May-Lian Wee’s column on young professionals discovering Charlotte. Monday, read Amy Baldwin’s blog on personal finance for 20- and 30-somethings. whipped out the plastic. But generating cash to cover price hikes is getting tougher. Interest rates are rising. Real estate values seem unlikely to keep soaring. Stock returns have been so-so. Is this the year rising prices and stagnant wages reach critical mass and throttle our spend- ing? “If you don’t get wage increases, then people are definitely going to feel the squeeze,” said Mike Wald, a Bureau of Labor Statistics econo- mist. “That’s the last safety valve to help people with higher prices.” Ledford, who works in data processing for Co- mag Marketing, a division of Hearst Publishing, tried tapping that safety valve. In April, he asked for a raise, a first for him. The answer was no. Ledford knows what he has to do next: Go over the household budget and look for places, pos- By Amy Baldwin and Stella M. Hopkins [email protected] [email protected] Does it feel like your paycheck is getting squeezed? You bet it is. We’re all shelling out more for bills large and small, from stamps and cable TV taxes to heat, health insur- ance and home mortgages . And gas prices are so depressing. “It just seems like everything is getting more expensive,” la- mented Chris Ledford, 28, of Charlotte. With student loans, $13,000 in credit card debt and his first child due in March, his financial pressures are mounting. To pay growing bills for the past few years, we’ve tapped savings and rising home values and STAFF PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY LUKE TRAUTWEIN – [email protected] Rising debt, bills, interest rates make 2006 ... The year of the SQUEEZE Consumers, take heart – financial remedies can lessen pressure Ledford SEE TURNLINE|4D By Binyamin Appelbaum [email protected] Planning to buy a home? Here’s a new twist on loca- tion, location, location. In neighborhoods with large numbers of foreclosures, it can be hard to resell your home for a profit, according to an Ob- server analysis. Average sales prices have barely budged since 1999 in Mecklenburg County neigh- borhoods with high foreclosure rates, the Observer found. The average increase in the price per square foot was 0.07 per- cent, compared to 10 percent for all neighborhoods. Since 2003, four in five fore- closures occurred in neighbor- hoods with average prices be- low $150,000. Many of these are new subdivisions of “starter homes,” priced for first-time buyers. Local real estate ex- perts caution these homes can be risky investments. “We have two real estate markets in Charlotte,” said longtime real estate agent Bobby Spivey. While prices in higher-income neighborhoods are rising, he said, prices in lower-income neighborhoods are flat or dropping. PRICES ARE FLAT OR FALLING High-foreclosure areas are a barrier to reselling homes ––––––– Problem is common in neighborhoods priced for first-time buyers ––––––– SEE TURNLINE|5D DIEDRA LAIRD – [email protected] The Stewarts Crossing neighborhood in east Charlotte is one of the worst for foreclosures. Jack Brennan, chairman and CEO of The Vanguard Group – the nation’s No. 2 mutual fund company behind Fidelity Investments – visited Char- lotte last week. He offered up an in- terview. I couldn’t turn down Brennan. The man is pas- sionate about every- day investors’ ability to put together a nice retirement. Knowing Brennan, 51, had kids – two 20-somethings in college and a 16-year-old – I wanted to get his ad- vice for younger investors. Check out VANGUARD’S BRENNAN CEO shares his tips on money LAYNE BAILEY – FILE PHOTO Jack Brennan, chief of the The Vanguard Group, met with 1,800 Charlotte call-center employees last week. OUT OF THE RED Amy Baldwin SEE BRENNAN|5D Editor’s Note Beginning today, Money- Wise will appear in the Sun- day paper, featuring more lo- cal coverage of consumer and personal finance issues. Mu- tual fund and stock listings run Tuesday through Saturday. On Mondays, Business news will be on 2A, including Doug Smith’s new Question of the Week column, on emerging local trends; Jeff El- der’s Inside This Week, on business happenings around town, and business news from around the nation and the world. PATRICK SCOTT, BUSINESS EDITOR; [email protected]; (704) 358-5176. MoneyWise GETTING AHEAD|GOING AWAY DOLLARS| TECHLIFE| FAST LANE www.charlotte.com + SUNDAY, JANUARY 15, 2006 SECTION D Sizing up the Squeeze Here’s how much some common, monthly household bills have risen from a year ago. Natural gas: $73 Gasoline: $33 Mortgage: $175 Family health insurance: $7.47 N.C. cable TV tax: 92 cents Wine: $3.40 Where applicable, figures are based on averages for Charlotte. Natural gas: for same usage as last January. Mortgage: three-year adjustable-rate mortgage adjusting this month to 7.11 percent on $176,000 house. Insurance: employee contribution for employer-provided coverage. Wine: one bottle a week. SOURCES: BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS, PIEDMONT NATURAL GAS, CAROLINAS AAA, GOODMORTGAGE.COM, CAROLINAHOME.COM, OBSERVER RESEARCH Found Money Ways to stick extra cash in your wallet. Cash in matured savings bonds. The value of savings bonds that have matured but remain unredeemed exceeds $13.5 billion, according to the Treasury Department. To find out more about your bonds, including whether they are still earning interest, go to www.savingsbonds.gov. Shop around for services. Has your bank added new fees? Check out competitors’ deals and see if your bank will match – or change banks. Have you checked your car insurance premiums against the competition? Maybe you can get a better rate somewhere else. And when is the last time you comparison-shopped for groceries? Ask yourself: Am I getting my money’s worth? If you’re the only one in your family who goes to the gym, maybe you can scale back from family to individual membership. Do you need a cell phone and a land line? Is there a less-expensive option for your cable TV or satellite service? Baldwin Wee

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Page 1: ••• D MoneyWisemellnik.net/ted/docs/foreclose/1D-1st-Jan15-Zo1-Business-01[1].pdf · server analysis. Average sales prices have barely budged since 1999 in Mecklenburg County

Ballantyne Resort is invitingguests to experience life in thefast lane with its new Speed andLuxury Package.

Speed comes in a 2006 Maser-ati Quattroporte, in which guestswill be chauffeured aroundthroughout their stay. (The baseprice on those wheels is $105,000and the average sticker priceruns between $120,000 and$130,000, said Bob Wyont, asalesman at Foreign Cars Italia inCharlotte.)

Luxury means accommoda-tions in the Presidential Suiteand a four-course dinner cookedin your suite by one of the re-sort’s chefs. Other luxuries: around of golf and one-hour spatreatment per guest. The finish-ing touch is breakfast in bed thefollowing morning.

“This is a great example ofways we are trying to differen-tiate ourselves as the only resort

in Charlotte,” said Christina Ar-geris, a Starwood PreferredGuest account manager for Bal-lantyne Resort.

But quick, grab your creditcard, because Speed and Luxurydon’t come cheap. The price forone night is $3,000.

Ballantyne Resort is partner-ing with Foreign Cars Italia to of-fer the Speed and Luxury Pack-age.

For more information, call(704) 248-4000 or go towww.luxurycollection.com/Bal-lantyne. If you hurry, you can bethe first to try out the package,which the hotel began promot-ing only this year. So far therehave been no bookings, Argerissaid.— AMY BALDWIN

Contact MoneyWise with your ideas forupmarket features: (704) 358-5166;[email protected]

Resort package designed tomeet need for speed, luxury

COURTESY OF JAMES J. BISSELL

THAT’S RICH A L O O K AT H O W T H EO T H E R H A L F S P L U R G E S

Spa opens at airportOptions for shopping and

relaxing at Charlotte/Douglas

keep going upscale.

GOING AWAY, 2D

Flu planning goes to workLaw firms, HR advisers tell

Charlotte employers to make

plans in case of a mass outbreak.

GETTING AHEAD, 3D

Million-dollar ideaThink there’s no room online for

little guys to make a buck?

Columnist John McBride

introduces Alex Tew. TECHLIFE, 6D

New Charlotte.com featuresToday, read Gillian May-Lian Wee’s column on

young professionals discovering Charlotte.

Monday, read Amy Baldwin’s blog on personal

finance for 20- and 30-somethings.

whipped out the plastic. But generating cash tocover price hikes is getting tougher. Interest ratesare rising. Real estate values seem unlikely tokeep soaring. Stock returns have been so-so.

Is this the year rising prices and stagnantwages reach critical mass and throttle our spend-ing?

“If you don’t get wage increases, then peopleare definitely going to feel the squeeze,” saidMike Wald, a Bureau of Labor Statistics econo-mist. “That’s the last safety valve to help peoplewith higher prices.”

Ledford, who works in data processing for Co-mag Marketing, a division of Hearst Publishing,tried tapping that safety valve. In April, he askedfor a raise, a first for him.

The answer was no.Ledford knows what he has to do next: Go over

the household budget and look for places, pos-

By Amy Baldwin

and Stella M. Hopkins

[email protected]

[email protected]

Does it feel like your paycheck is gettingsqueezed? You bet it is.

We’re all shelling out more for bills large andsmall, from stamps and cableTV taxes to heat, health insur-ance and home mortgages . Andgas prices are so depressing.

“It just seems like everythingis getting more expensive,” la-mented Chris Ledford, 28, ofCharlotte. With student loans,$13,000 in credit card debt andhis first child due in March, hisfinancial pressures are mounting.

To pay growing bills for the past few years,we’ve tapped savings and rising home values and

STAFF PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY LUKE TRAUTWEIN – [email protected]

Rising debt, bills, interest rates make 2006 ...

The year of the

SQUEEZE

Consumers, take heart – financial remedies can lessen pressure

Ledford

SEE TURNLINE|4D

By Binyamin Appelbaum

[email protected]

Planning to buy a home?Here’s a new twist on loca-

tion, location, location.In neighborhoods with large

numbers of foreclosures, it can

be hard to resell your home fora profit, according to an Ob-server analysis.

Average sales prices havebarely budged since 1999 inMecklenburg County neigh-borhoods with high foreclosurerates, the Observer found. Theaverage increase in the priceper square foot was 0.07 per-cent, compared to 10 percentfor all neighborhoods.

Since 2003, four in five fore-closures occurred in neighbor-hoods with average prices be-

low $150,000. Many of these arenew subdivisions of “starterhomes,” priced for first-timebuyers. Local real estate ex-perts caution these homes canbe risky investments.

“We have two real estatemarkets in Charlotte,” saidlongtime real estate agentBobby Spivey. While prices inhigher-income neighborhoodsare rising, he said, prices inlower-income neighborhoodsare flat or dropping.

PRICES ARE FLAT OR FALLING

High-foreclosure areas area barrier to reselling homes

–––––––

Problem is common inneighborhoods pricedfor first-time buyers

–––––––

SEE TURNLINE|5D

DIEDRA LAIRD – [email protected]

The Stewarts Crossingneighborhood in eastCharlotte is one of the worstfor foreclosures.

Jack Brennan, chairman and CEOof The Vanguard Group – the nation’sNo. 2 mutual fund company behindFidelity Investments – visited Char-lotte last week. He offered up an in-

terview. I couldn’t turn

down Brennan.The man is pas-

sionate about every-day investors’ abilityto put together anice retirement.Knowing Brennan,51, had kids – two

20-somethings in college and a16-year-old – I wanted to get his ad-vice for younger investors. Check out

VANGUARD’S BRENNAN

CEO shares his tips on money

LAYNE BAILEY – FILE PHOTO

Jack Brennan, chief of the The Vanguard Group, metwith 1,800 Charlotte call-center employees last week.

OUT OF THE RED

AmyBaldwin

SEE BRENNAN|5D

Editor’s NoteBeginning today, Money-

Wise will appear in the Sun-day paper, featuring more lo-cal coverage of consumer andpersonal finance issues. Mu-tual fund and stock listingsrun Tuesday through Saturday.

On Mondays, Businessnews will be on 2A, includingDoug Smith’s new Questionof the Week column, onemerging local trends; Jeff El-der’s Inside This Week, onbusiness happenings aroundtown, and business news fromaround the nation and theworld. — PATRICK SCOTT, BUSINESS

EDITOR; [email protected];

(704) 358-5176.

MoneyWiseGETTING AHEAD| GOING AWAY DOLLARS| TECHLIFE| FAST LANE

www.charlotte.com +

S U N D A Y , J A N U A R Y 1 5 , 2 0 0 6

• • • SECTION D

Sizing up theSqueezeHere’s how much somecommon, monthlyhousehold bills haverisen from a year ago.

Natural gas: $73

Gasoline: $33

Mortgage: $175

Family health insurance:$7.47

N.C. cable TV tax: 92cents

Wine: $3.40Where applicable, figures arebased on averages for Charlotte.Natural gas: for same usage aslast January. Mortgage:three-year adjustable-ratemortgage adjusting this monthto 7.11 percent on $176,000house. Insurance: employeecontribution foremployer-provided coverage.Wine: one bottle a week.

— SOURCES: BUREAU OF

LABOR STATISTICS, PIEDMONT

NATURAL GAS, CAROLINAS AAA,

GOODMORTGAGE.COM,

CAROLINAHOME.COM,

OBSERVER RESEARCH

Found MoneyWays to stick extra cash in your wallet.

• Cash in matured savings bonds. The value of savings bonds that havematured but remain unredeemed exceeds $13.5 billion, according to theTreasury Department. To find out more about your bonds, including whetherthey are still earning interest, go to www.savingsbonds.gov.

• Shop around for services. Has your bank added new fees? Check outcompetitors’ deals and see if your bank will match – or change banks. Haveyou checked your car insurance premiums against the competition? Maybeyou can get a better rate somewhere else. And when is the last time youcomparison-shopped for groceries?

• Ask yourself: Am I getting my money’s worth? If you’re the only one in yourfamily who goes to the gym, maybe you can scale back from family toindividual membership. Do you need a cell phone and a land line? Is there aless-expensive option for your cable TV or satellite service?

Baldwin Wee