Porterville Recorder

Shoppers spend freely heading into the holidays

- By ANNE D'INNOCENZIO

NEW YORK — Shoppers are spending freely heading into the holidays, but heavy investment­s and incentives like free shipping by retailers are giving Wall Street pause.

Target Inc., Kohl's Corp., Best Buy Co. and TJX Cos. all reported strong sales at stores opened at least a year. That's a key measure of health for a retailer. Online sales also surged. Target reported a 49 percent increase in online sales, which was better than expected.

But shares of Target and the parent of TJ Maxx took a hit after reporting that their thirdquart­er profit results were squeezed by higher e-commerce costs. Kohl's delivered strong third-quarter results, but it issued a cautious annual profit forecast. Best Buy, which has been on a winning streak, couldn't win over investors even as it boosted its annual earnings guidance.

"There are clearly a bit of two worlds. Everything we're seeing about the consumer is very positive," Best Buy CEO Hubert Joly told reporters on a conference call Tuesday. "Consumer confidence is at an all-time high...unemployme­nt is incredibly low, wages are going up."

But, he cautioned, "The financial market can be a different picture and we'll see how it evolves."

The National Retail Federation, the nation's largest retail trade group, is expecting holiday retail sales in November and December — excluding automobile­s, gasoline and restaurant­s — to increase as much as 4.8 percent over 2017 for a total of $720.89 billion. The sales growth marks a slowdown from last year's 5.3 percent, which was the largest gain since 2010.

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