The Palm Beach Post

Happy holidays: Shoppers buying big-ticket items

- By Abha Bhattarai Washington Post

Americans spent a record $2 billion online on Labor Day, making it one of the biggest online shopping days of the year and giving new hope to retailers ahead of the closely watched holiday season.

Online spending on Labor Day grew 23 percent to $2.08 billion, from $1.69 billion a year earlier, as shoppers bought big-ticket items like electronic­s, appliances, mattresses and grills, according to data from Adobe Analytics being released Friday.

The data paint a picture of growing consumer confidence, as a low unemployme­nt rate and signs of wage growth help boost sales for some of the country’s largest retailers.

Walmart, Nordstrom and Home Depot have all posted strong quarterly sales in recent weeks, and economists say they expect that momentum to continue through the end of the year.

“The numbers bear out that we’re in for a good holiday season,” said Michael Klein, director of retail industry strategy for Adobe. “Consumers were shopping for larger and more expensive products during Labor Day, after slower growth in the first half of the year.”

The retail industry, which has weathered its share of economic challenges and bankruptci­es since the Great Recession, had a particular­ly good holiday season last year.

Sales rose 5.5 percent to $691.9 billion in November and December 2017, marking the strongest growth in holiday retail sales in 12 years, according to the National Retail Federation. The lobbying group has yet to release this year’s holiday forecast.

But so far, retailers seem optimistic: A number of firms, from Walmart to Tiffany & Co., have

raised their 2018 outlooks in the past month, as consumers continue to spend both online and in stores.

“There is no doubt that, like others, we’re benefiting from a strong consumer environmen­t — perhaps the strongest I’ve seen in my career,” Brian Cornell, Target’s chief executive, said in an earnings call last month. Online sales at Target.com jumped 41 percent in the most recent quarter, while overall sales growth rose to a 13-year high.

Nationally, the 23 percent bump on Labor Day surpassed sales growth during other holidays this year, including Memorial Day (when online sales rose 19 percent to $1.92 billion) and the Fourth of July (up 13 percent to $1.38 billion), according to Adobe Analytics, which measured online transactio­ns at 80 of the country’s 100 largest websites.

Adobe also found consumers are increasing­ly buying straight from their phones. Roughly 30 percent of Labor Day orders were placed on a smartphone, compared with 60 percent on desktop computers and 10 percent on tablets. (It is noteworthy, though, that desktop-shoppers tend to spend more than counterpar­ts using smaller devices: The average desktop shopper spent $142 per order on Labor Day, compared with $125 while shopping on a tablet and $111 on a smartphone.)

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