Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Black Friday finds picky shoppers waiting for bigger bargains

- Jeannette Neumann and Olivia Rockeman Bloomberg News

Black Friday sales show U.S. consumers are watching their wallets and holding out for deeper discounts, which sets retailers up for a subdued holiday shopping season and potentiall­y lackluster earnings results early next year.

Consumers aren’t spending at the same pace they did during the past couple of years, when the holidays were marked by post-pandemic splurges. While estimates on brickand-mortar Black Friday sales won’t be available for some time, Salesforce Inc. expects online U.S. sales to grow 1% in November and December versus a year earlier, which would be the slowest growth in at least five years. Sales were in line with that figure on Thanksgivi­ng Day and appeared to pick up speed on Black Friday, the software company said.

Some shoppers said they were unimpresse­d by the discounts on Friday — and are likely to hold out for retailers to offer better sales. At the Willowbroo­k Mall in Wayne, New

Jersey, Alyssa Fanelli said she came up emptyhande­d while shopping at Macy’s for wedding shoes. The brand she likes was offering 25% off. “That’s not a Black Friday deal,” Fanelli said, “just a regular sale price.”

That’s in part because retailers have done a better job recently of whittling down the extra merchandis­e they had on hand. “Inventory is in line this year,” Jessica Ramírez, an analyst at Jane Hali & Associates, said in an interview. “There’s not as much pressure to move inventory as last year.”

Other data companies are forecastin­g a similarly sluggish holiday shopping season. Adobe expects online revenue growth in the U.S. during the next two months to be 4.8% versus a year earlier. While that’s a faster pace than last year, it’s well below the average annual rate of 13% growth before the pandemic. Mastercard, meanwhile, sees U.S. retail sales online and in-store up 3.7% this year versus last. That’s back to the pace of pre-pandemic growth.

Consumers are “now very price-conscious,” Vivek Pandya, lead analyst at Adobe Digital Insights, said in an interview.

Adobe, Salesforce and Mastercard track different transactio­ns, so the pace of growth is different, even if the general trajectory of their forecasts is similar. Most of the data tracks online sales, a reflection of the difficulty tracking in-store sales in real time as well as the continued growth of e-commerce and a shift away from the doorbuster sales of Black Fridays past.

Still, many shoppers turned out on Friday to celebrate the unofficial start to the holiday shopping season. At Westfield UTC, a high-end mall in San Diego, the parking lot was full by 11 a.m. local time. Stores including Gap, Abercrombi­e & Fitch, Sephora and Lululemon were packed with shoppers buying products including kids’ pajamas, skin-care gift sets and colorful leggings. At New York’s Hudson Yards shopping center, any store with an in-yourface sale sign was drawing a crowd. Uniqlo, Zara and H&M, with placards offering 30%, 40% and 50% off, were bustling.

Personal savings are dwindling from pandemic highs and while the rate of inflation is moderating, many items remain more expensive than they were a couple of years ago. Higher interest rates are also raising the price of buying homes and cars. That’s forcing consumers to make trade-offs.

Last year, Lyndsey and Tyler Manassa spent as much as $1,000 on gifts for their family. This year, they’re saving up for the baby they are expecting in January. “No Christmas gifts this year,” said

Tyler while shopping for new-home essentials at a Target in the Logan Square neighborho­od of Chicago.

Still, some of the consumer pullback is a return to a more normal pace of shopping after the topsy-turvy shopping experience­s of recent years, notes Michelle Meyer,

U.S. chief economist at Mastercard Economics Institute. This year’s sales forecast points to a “return to a more balanced economy,” she said in an interview. Unemployme­nt remains low, she added. “Consumers have the ability to spend.”

In the immediate aftermath of Covid-19, consumers who felt flush with extra savings and stimulus payments splurged, allowing retailers to cut back on discounts. Then came the whiplash of supply-chain chaos, which meant that the merchandis­e that didn’t arrive on time for the

2021 shopping season was piling up ahead at the end of 2022. Retailers offered steep discounts to clear those items, which helped to juice sales.

Those deep discounts last year, though, appear to have conditione­d some shoppers to expect even better sales this year. Mark Talty visited the American Dream megamall in New Jersey on Friday in the hopes of buying a jacket from North Face. “I don’t see the great sales that they talk about,” he said. He plans to spend about the same amount on holiday gifts this year as he did in 2022.

Melissa Minkow, director of retail strategy at digital consultanc­y CI&T, said she’s seen similar complaints from shoppers on social media. “There were expectatio­ns that discounts were going to be very, very deep,” she said in an interview. “That’s just not realistic.”

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States