Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Black Friday spending blew away the previous record.

Online-heavy binge was boon to big, small stores

- By Dee-Ann Durbin

Black Friday online sales hit a new record this year as pandemic-wary Americans filled virtual carts instead of real ones.

Consumers spent an estimated $9 billion on U.S. retail websites on Black Friday, according to Adobe Analytics, which tracks online shopping. That was a 22 percent increase over the previous record of $7.4 billion set in 2019.

Meanwhile, traffic to physical stores plummeted as retailers tried to prevent crowds by cutting their hours and limiting doorbuster deals. U.S. store visits dropped by 52 percent on Black Friday, according to Sensormati­c Solutions, a retail tracker. Traffic was slower in the Northeast and West than in the Midwest and South, said Brian Field, Sensormati­c’s senior director of global retail consulting.

Jewelry and footwear saw some of the biggest in-person sales declines, according to RetailNext, a shopping tracker. Apparel sales were down 50 percent, while sales of home goods fell by 39 percent.

Even with that drop, Black Friday will still likely end up as one of the biggest in-person shopping days in the U.S. this year, Field said. He thinks many people will still shop for the holidays in person but will choose mid-week days, when crowds are smaller. Heavier instore discounts and concerns about lengthy shipping times could also draw shoppers closer to Christmas.

“Black Friday had a lot to lose, but some of it is going to be distribute­d throughout the holiday season,” Field said.

One trend that could remain after the pandemic ends is stores remaining closed on Thanksgivi­ng Day, Field said. Since 2013, a growing number of stores had opened on Thanksgivi­ng to match their competitor­s and get a jump on Black Friday. But it’s typically not a big day for retailers, and this year many stayed closed. Thanksgivi­ng store traffic was down 95 percent, he said.

Field said stores may be rethinking the cost of paying employees and opening on Thanksgivi­ng when they could easily make up for those sales online.

“I wonder, now that we’re seeing a season where they were able to cut the cord on it, if it will give them pause,” he said.

Adobe expects Monday to be the largest online sales day in U.S. history, with estimated spending of $10.8 billion to $12.7 billion.

One reason for the big numbers is that people are shopping online for things that they bought in person before the pandemic, such as groceries and alcohol, Adobe said. As for more traditiona­l gifts, Hot Wheels cars, Lego sets, Apple AirPods, Samsung television­s and video games are among the biggest sellers.

Big retailers such as Walmart and Target benefited from the surge, but small retailers did as well, Adobe said. Sales at big stores surged by 403 percent on Thanksgivi­ng and Black Friday compared with the daily average in October, but sales at smaller retailers also grew by 349 percent.

 ?? Charles Rex Arbogast The Associated Press ?? Shoppers pass a sale sign Saturday on Chicago’s famed Magnificen­t Mile shopping district. U.S. consumers spent an estimated $9 billion on Black Friday, an amount that beat the previous record by more than 20 percent.
Charles Rex Arbogast The Associated Press Shoppers pass a sale sign Saturday on Chicago’s famed Magnificen­t Mile shopping district. U.S. consumers spent an estimated $9 billion on Black Friday, an amount that beat the previous record by more than 20 percent.

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