New York Post

STUN AND GAME$

Glut of toys pain for sellers, gains for buyers

- By LISA FICKENSCHE­R

The holidays ushered in historic bargain prices on toys — and 2023 promises even deeper discounts for consumers while delivering more pain for toy sellers.

Known for being recessionp­roof, the toy industry is instead plagued by a perfect storm — cash-strapped consumers who have less disposable income for non-essential items and a glut of toys that steadily built up last year, reaching a tipping point around the holidays.

Stuck with more toys than they can sell, retailers are cutting back on their toy purchases this year and manufactur­ers are making fewer items, experts tell The Post.

“For the first half of the year, if not the entire year, toys will continue to be deeply discounted and toy makers’ profit margins will shrink drasticall­y,” said Isaac Larian, chief executive of MGA Entertainm­ent, maker of LOL Surprise and Bratz dolls.

Toy prices, which typically rise after Black Friday because popular items become scarce, actually declined another 10% through Dec. 23, according Linda Bolton Weiser, an analyst for investment bank DA Davidson.

Overall sales revenue from toys increased 3% in 2022 from January to September while the number of toys sold decreased by 3% over the same period of time, according to NPD. That’s a precipitou­s drop from pandemic years, when toy sales grew by 22% year-over-year in 2020 and by 12% in 2021.

“They bought so much [during that pandemic] that they are sitting on their own stockpiles,” Larian noted.

MGA’s holiday sales declined by about 10%, the first drop in six years, Larian said.

Some saw the writing on the wall last year and began pushing for smaller, less expensive items that cost under $10 as the holiday season approached, The Post reported. The steep discountin­g began in early November, or much earlier than usual.

While online toy sales grew by 206% from Nov. 1 to Dec. 31 compared to a year ago, the industry had to rely on deep discounts, reaching a markdown peak of 34% off compared to 19% in 2021, to sell its holiday haul, according to the most recent data from Adobe Digital Insights, which tracks online sales.

Toys were more deeply discounted than any other category of merchandis­e. Electronic­s had the second highest markdowns with an average 25% discount, according to Adobe.

“This will be a tough, challengin­g year, certainly the first half,” said Jay Foreman, chief executive of Boca Raton, Fla.-based Basic Fun toys.

The privately held Basic Fun — which makes products like Tonka Trucks and Lite Brite — expected sales growth of 15% in 2022 compared to the previous year, but experience­d an increase of just 5%, Foreman said during a recent presentati­on on the toy industry for DA Davidson.

“We have a lot of extra inventory now, but we expect it to be gone by the second half of the year, and anecdotall­y I’d say [the big retailers] will have a little bit more than they had hoped for,” Foreman said.

Late arrivals

The toy-buying cycle was disrupted in 2021 when a huge number of toys — particular­ly the prized large and expensive items — arrived too late for the holiday season, leaving retailers with more merchandis­e than they needed or wanted at the start of 2022.

Sky-high shipping costs were partly to blame for the late arrivals, with retailers and manufactur­ers balking at shipping containers that cost upward of $20,000 a pop, driving up overall prices as well.

Shipping rates have since come down dramatical­ly, but inventory levels have not.

“It looks like the first week of January in the stores right now,” Joshua Loerzel, coowner of Sky Castle Toys, had told The Post last year. “There are a lot of early price reductions that you wouldn’t ordinarily see until right after the holidays.”

This will be a tough, challengin­g year, certainly the first half.

— Jay Foreman, chief executive of Basic Fun toys

 ?? ?? A load of unsold toys remaining from the holidays and limited consumer cash has led to deep price markdowns that are stinging sellers.
A load of unsold toys remaining from the holidays and limited consumer cash has led to deep price markdowns that are stinging sellers.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States