The Palm Beach Post

Macy’s, Penney report growth in holiday sales

- By Anne D’Innocenzio

NEW YORK — Macy’s and J.C. Penney reported holiday sales growth Thursday, offering encouragin­g signs that if department stores struggling to hold their own against online retailers had a decent period, other retailers did as well.

The results came after both retailers focused on improving their online services while highlighti­ng more exclusive offerings. Low unemployme­nt, a strong stock market and other factors set the stage for a good holiday season.

The National Retail Federation believes retail sales could exceed its forecast for growth of 3.6 percent to 4 percent from a year ago and mark the best performanc­e since 2014.

Much of that growth may go to online sellers, though, and Bain & Co. predicted that Amazon will account for half of the holiday 2017 sales growth. Many retailers, particular­ly department store chains, still have lots of challenges ahead as shoppers are increasing­ly buying online and shifting their spending more toward experience­s.

Macy’s said sales at establishe­d stores rose 1 percent in the November-December period. That excludes licensed businesses and compares to a 2.7 percent drop a year ago. The company said active apparel, shoes, dresses, coats, fine jewelry, men’s tailored clothing, children’s fashions and home furnishing­s were all top performers.

However, it still expects an annual sales drop at establishe­d stores of 2.4 percent to 2.7 percent, and total revenue is forecast to fall 3.6 percent to 3.9 percent compared to a year ago. Macy’s also said it will close another 11 stores, cut jobs and streamline non-store functions to save about $300 million. CEO Jeff Gennette said the company’s focus has been expanding online, stabilizin­g its stores and laying the foundation for growth.

Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail, said in an investor note that while the holiday sales growth is a welcome change, Macy’s still lags the overall sector’s growth and he believes it is losing market share overall and in key categories.

Saunders also thinks that the sales growth is a function of a robust market where shoppers were willing to spend more than a result of specific actions taken by Macy’s.

J.C. Penney, meanwhile, said revenue at stores open at least a year rose 3.4 percent for the nine-week period that ended Dec. 30. That compares to a 0.8 percent decline a year earlier. It also reaffirmed its full-year guidance for fiscal 2017.

CEO Marvin Ellison said the sales growth was led by home, beauty and fine jewelry, and that Penney’s clothing business is improving. He added that e-commerce business is outpacing prior-year results with double-digit sales growth, fueled by fine jewelry, home decor, luggage, toys, boots and athletic footwear.

Still, Jefferies analyst Randal Konik said in a note that the November and December trend “doesn’t change our overall thesis, as we believe the mall-based (department) store sector is challenged with structural issues.”

 ?? DUSTIN FRANZ FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? J.C. Penney said revenue at stores open at least a year rose 3.4 percent for the nine-week period that ended Dec. 30. That compares to a 0.8 percent decline a year earlier.
DUSTIN FRANZ FOR THE WASHINGTON POST J.C. Penney said revenue at stores open at least a year rose 3.4 percent for the nine-week period that ended Dec. 30. That compares to a 0.8 percent decline a year earlier.

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