Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Report: Holiday sales up 11.9 percent

- By Anne D’innocenzio

NEW YORK » Despite holiday deals all month, shoppers still picked up their spending on Thanksgivi­ng Day and Black Friday, one technology company says.

Spending for Thursday and Friday together increased 11.9 percent compared with the same two-day period last year, says First Data, which analyzed online and in-store payments across different forms of cards from 1.3 million merchants. Retail spending, which excludes grocery stores, restaurant­s, auto parts merchants and gas stations, rose 9.3 percent.

The buying was helped by higher consumer confidence, low unemployme­nt and cooler weather, the firm said. It said hurricane cleanup-related spending may also have had an effect. Texas, pummeled by Hurricane Harvey in August, had the second-highest percentage increase in sales, a rise of 13.4 percent that was fueled by electronic­s and furniture.

Nationwide, both retail spending and overall spending rose nearly 6 percent from Nov. 1 through Nov. 22. The firm’s data captures about 40 percent of all card transactio­ns in the U.S. but excludes cash.

“There was no making up for a weak pre-season. And there was no stealing from the holiday season with a strong preseason,” said Glenn Fodor, head of informatio­n and analytics at First Data. “It’s the perfect storm of the economic backdrop and weather.”

E-commerce sales rose 13 percent for the Thanksgivi­ng and Black Friday period, the traditiona­l kickoff to the holiday shopping season. Physical stores saw an increase of 8.5 percent, First Data said.

According to First Data, 29 percent of the total dollars spent over the two-day period came from e-commerce, up from 25 percent last year and about double from the 14 percent of 2014. Electronic­s and appliances were by far the big attraction­s, with a 19 percent sales increase. The clothing and accessorie­s category was the only one among the seven that First Data tracks to show higher sales growth in stores for Thanksgivi­ng and Black Friday compared with online.

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 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A shopper walks past a display of artificial Christmas trees at a JCPenney store Friday in Seattle. Black Friday has morphed from a single day when people got up early to score doorbuster­s into a whole season of deals, so shoppers may feel less need to...
ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A shopper walks past a display of artificial Christmas trees at a JCPenney store Friday in Seattle. Black Friday has morphed from a single day when people got up early to score doorbuster­s into a whole season of deals, so shoppers may feel less need to...

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