Black Friday Weekend Slows Down As Allure Fades

Black Friday Walmart Shoppers Animated Gifs
Black Friday Walmart Shoppers

Black Friday fatigue is set­ting in.

Early dis­count­ing, more online shop­ping and a mixed econ­o­my meant few­er peo­ple shopped over Thanksgiving week­end, the National Retail Federation said Sunday. Overall, 133.7 mil­lion peo­ple shopped in stores and online over the four-day week­end, down 5.2 per­cent from last year, accord­ing to a sur­vey of 4,631 peo­ple con­duct­ed by Prosper Insights & Analytics for the trade group.

Total spend­ing for the week­end is expect­ed to fall 11 per­cent to $50.9 bil­lion from an esti­mat­ed $57.4 bil­lion last year, the trade group esti­mat­ed. Part of the rea­son is that Target, J.C. Penney, Macy’s, Wal-Mart and oth­er major retail­ers pushed fat dis­counts as ear­ly as Halloween. Some opened stores even ear­li­er on Thanksgiving. All that stole some thun­der from Black Friday and the rest of the weekend.

Still, the pre­lim­i­nary data makes retail­ers wor­ried that shop­pers remain fru­gal despite improv­ing employ­ment and falling gas prices. Matt Shay, the trade group’s CEO, said he thinks peo­ple ben­e­fit­ing from the recov­ery may not feel the need to fight crowds to get the deep­est dis­count on a TV or toast­er. And those who feel like the reces­sion nev­er end­ed may not have the mon­ey and will stretch out what they spend through Christmas. And shop­pers are still feel­ing the effects of high food prices and stag­nant wages.

While they’re more opti­mistic, they’re very cau­tious,” Shay said. “If the deals are not right for them, they’re not going to spend.”

Bottom line: Expect more deep dis­counts, all sea­son long. “Every day will be Black Friday. Every minute will be Cyber Monday,” he said. That could be what it takes to get shop­pers to open their wal­lets for the hol­i­day shop­ping sea­son, which accounts for about 20 per­cent of annu­al retail sales. Besides eco­nom­ic fac­tors, peo­ple are becom­ing more dis­cern­ing when they shop. Armed with smart­phones and price-com­par­i­son apps, they know what’s a good deal — and what’s not.

Kimani Brown, 39, of New York City, was among the Black Friday defec­tors. After four years of brav­ing the crowds, the sales failed to lure him out this year. “I con­sid­er myself a smart shop­per. And it’s not as allur­ing as it used to be,” Brown said. “It’s a mar­ket­ing tool, and I don’t want to be pulled into it.” He also said the fren­zy pushed him to over­spend, and he paid the price in January on his cred­it card state­ment. Instead, he said he will look online Monday, the online shop­ping day often called Cyber Monday. Some who went shop­ping on Thanksgiving felt they were doing it against their will. Cathyliz Lopez of New York City said she felt forced to shop on the hol­i­day. “It’s ruin­ing the spir­it of Thanksgiving,” the 20-year-old said Thursday. “But I was check­ing all the ads, and the best deals were today.”

The National Retail Federation is still pre­dict­ing a 4.1 per­cent increase in sales for the sea­son. That would be the high­est increase since the 4.8 per­cent gain in 2011. Some stores and malls had rea­son to be opti­mistic. Dan Jasper, a spokesman at Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota, said cus­tomer counts are up 5 to 6 per­cent for the four-day week­end. One plus: Shoppers were buy­ing more for them­selves, a sign of opti­mism. “They felt con­fi­dent in the econ­o­my,” he said.

CEOs at Target and Toys R Us said they saw shop­pers not just focus­ing on the door­buster deals but throw­ing extra items in their carts. Macy’s CEO Terry Lundgren told The Associated Press on Friday that he’s hop­ing low­er gas prices will help spending.

There’s rea­son to believe that con­fi­dence should con­tin­ue to grow. That should be good for dis­cre­tionary spend­ing,” he said.

Some of those dis­cre­tionary dol­lars are migrat­ing online.

Target said Thanksgiving saw a 40 per­cent surge in online sales and was its biggest online sales day ever. And Wal-Mart report­ed Thanksgiving was its sec­ond-high­est online day ever, topped only by Cyber Monday last year.

From Nov. 1 through Friday, $22.7 bil­lion has been spent online, a 15 per­cent increase from last year, accord­ing to research firm comScore. On Thanksgiving, online sales surged 32 per­cent, while Black Friday online sales jumped 26 per­cent. In stores, shop­pers spent $9.1 bil­lion on Black Friday, accord­ing to research firm ShopperTrak, down 7 per­cent from last year. That was part­ly due to a 24 per­cent surge in Thanksgiving sales, to $3.2 billion.

ShopperTrak esti­mat­ed that in-store sales for the two days com­bined slipped half a per­cent to $12.29 bil­lion. http://​www​.huff​in​g​ton​post​.com/​2​0​1​4​/​1​2​/​0​1​/​b​l​a​c​k​-​f​r​i​d​a​y​-​w​e​e​k​e​n​d​-​s​a​l​e​s​-​f​a​l​l​_​n​_​6​2​4​5​9​2​6​.​h​tml 

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