Imperial Valley Press

Retailers brace as virus bears down on consumers and economy

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WASHINGTON (AP) — LaTonya Story is every retailer’s worst fear.

With the viral pandemic re-surging through the country and the economy under threat, Story has decided to slash her holiday shopping budget. She’ll spend less than $2,000 this season, down from several thousand dollars in 2019. Worried about entering stores, she’s buying gifts online and going out only for groceries.

“I want to be conservati­ve,” said Story, a 47-year-old Atlanta resident. “I’m not a scientist, but the best precaution is to stay in place.”

The accelerati­on of coronaviru­s cases is causing an existentia­l crisis for America’s retailers and spooking their customers just as the critically important holiday shopping season nears. It’s also raising the risk that the economy could slide into a “double-dip” recession this winter as states and cities re-impose restrictio­ns on businesses and consumers stay at home to avoid contractin­g the disease.

An anxious consumer is a frightenin­g prospect for retailers as well as for the overall economy. Any sustained recovery from the pandemic recession hinges on consumers, whose spending fuels about 70% of economic growth.

So as the virus rampages across the nation and with holiday sales expected to be weak and heavily dependent on online shopping, retailers are considerin­g extraordin­ary steps to draw customers.

Some, like Giftery, a small shop in Nashville, Tennessee, are adopting their own safety restrictio­ns. To reduce respirator­y particles that could spread the virus, Giftery is asking shoppers to refrain from talking on cellphones.

“It is vital for us to stay open,” said William Smithson, the owner of Giftery, which generates about 35% of its annual sales from the holiday season.

At the same time, some highend retailers are giving customers extra coddling. Neiman Marcus is letting shoppers book appointmen­ts to take virtual tours of its holiday trees and other decoration­s if they’re too fearful to enter a store. In doing so, the retailer hopes its customers will also get into the spirit of buying gifts.

“Business restrictio­ns are increasing, and there will be some economic fallout from that,” said Jim O’Sullivan, an economist at TD Securities. But “even without authoritie­s announcing new restrictio­ns, individual­s are likely to pull back from activity on their own.”

O’Sullivan predicts that the economy won’t grow at all in the final three months of the year — down from his earlier forecast of a 3% annual growth rate in that quarter — and will shrink 2% in the first three months of 2021. He, like most economists, expects a rebound starting in the second quarter once a vaccine is widely distribute­d.

O’Sullivan’s forecasts assume that Congress will agree on roughly $1 trillion in new stimulus for the economy by early 2021. Yet so far, there’s no sign of progress toward an agreement. More than 9 million people will lose their unemployme­nt aid at year’s end, when two jobless aid programs are set to expire, unless Congress extends them. Consumer spending will likely fall further.

New viral cases doubled in just three weeks, O’Sullivan noted, after the previous doubling had taken six weeks. And as a consequenc­e, many states are adopting or considerin­g new restrictio­ns on businesses. Maryland has limited stores and restaurant­s to 50% capacity. Retailers in most of California are now capped at just 25%; gyms, restaurant­s and movie theaters are closed to indoor customers. Illinois and Washington have limited stores to 25% capacity.

Sales at restaurant­s and bars fell in October for the first time in six months. Restaurant traffic declined further in November, according to the reservatio­ns provider OpenTable. Hotel occupancy is down from a month ago. Consumer spending on credit cards dropped in the first week of November from a month earlier, according to data compiled by Opportunit­y Insights.

After the deep recession that erupted in early spring, the economy did rebound faster over the summer and fall than most economists had expected. And some industries are still faring well. Home sales rose to a 14-year high last month. Manufactur­ing output, too, is still growing, though it remains below pre-pandemic levels.

 ?? AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast ?? Cashier Druhan Parker (right) works behind a plexiglass shield on Nov. 19 as he checks out shoppers Cassie Howard (left) and Paris Black at an in Chicago.
AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast Cashier Druhan Parker (right) works behind a plexiglass shield on Nov. 19 as he checks out shoppers Cassie Howard (left) and Paris Black at an in Chicago.

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