Bangkok Post

Foot traffic at Walmart rebounds

- READE LEVINSON MELISSA FARES

LONDON/NEW YORK: Americans increased their visits to supermarke­ts far more than to Walmart stores as panic-buying peaked in mid-March, a Reuters analysis of foot traffic to retailers in the United States shows.

Yet by early May, visits to Walmart stores had rebounded and were outpacing visits to supermarke­ts, according to the analysis.

The data offer a snapshot of some of the dramatic changes in Americans’ shopping patterns in the weeks before and after the United States implemente­d lockdowns intended to curb the spread of coronaviru­s.

Bentonvill­e, Arkansas-based Walmart Inc gets more than half its US revenue from grocery sales.

Reuters compared foot traffic observed by SafeGraph from the first week of March through early May.

SafeGraph compiles anonymised location data from mobile devices and compares it with building footprints to measure traffic. The number of mobile devices recorded by SafeGraph fluctuates, so Reuters adjusted the data based on the number of devices SafeGraph reported each day.

“During panic buying time, it was ‘I want to get my groceries, and that’s all I want to do. I want to do it safely, I want to get in and out’,” said Randy Hare, portfolio manager at Huntington Private Bank, which owns shares of Walmart, Costco Wholesale Corp and others.

“Some shoppers might have concluded that Walmart is one of the worst places for lines,” he said. Walmart declined to comment. Walmart saw an 18% increase in foot traffic from March 13 to March 17 compared to the first week of March, Reuters found.

That’s about half the 37% increase at supermarke­ts and other grocery stores during the same time period, when consumers stocked up on goods in advance of coronaviru­s lockdowns implemente­d around the United States.

During the same period, Target Corp saw a 14% rise in foot traffic, less than half the increase at grocery stores. Major dollar store chains saw a 26% increase in foot traffic.

A Target spokeswoma­n referenced an April 23 press release, which said the company experience­d a “surge in traffic and sales” in mid-March followed by a decline in in-store sales as “guests across the country began to shelter in place” and turned to online orders. She declined further comment. After that initial surge in visitors, traffic to Walmart and other big box and grocery stores fell in late March and early April, Reuters found.

Walmart lost more traffic than most supermarke­ts, but it still performed better than Target and Amazon.com Inc’s Whole Foods Market, which saw traffic drop by 26% and 33%, respective­ly, during the first two weeks of April.

An Amazon spokeswoma­n was not immediatel­y available for comment.

Walmart has announced that stores would allow no more than five customers per 1,000 square feet, or roughly 20% of store capacity. Despite this, as of May 6, foot traffic to Walmart stores had rebounded and was up 16% compared to the first week of March.

“They’ve made a lot of investment­s in grocery and they did it at the right time,” said Huntington’s Hare, highlighti­ng Walmart’s plans to have more than 2,000 stores where they can deliver groceries within two hours. “If Covid would have happened two years ago, they wouldn’t have been ready.”

The SafeGraph data do not include transactio­n size, and it is possible that some shoppers made fewer trips but purchased more items per trip. The foot-traffic data also include traffic by retail employees and gig workers fulfilling shoppers’ orders placed online.

 ??  ?? A worker delivers groceries to a customer’s vehicle outside a Walmart store in Amsterdam, New York on May 15.
A worker delivers groceries to a customer’s vehicle outside a Walmart store in Amsterdam, New York on May 15.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand