Khaleej Times

Amazon maintains holiday dominance despite pressure

- Spencer Soper

seattle — Amazon.com maintained its online dominance in the 2017 holiday shopping season despite increasing competitio­n from Wal-Mart Stores, Target Corp and Best Buy Co.

Amazon captured 89 per cent of online spending among dominant holiday retailers in the fiveweek period beginning on Thanksgivi­ng, according to an analysis of credit- and debit-card transactio­n data by Earnest Research in New York. Wal-Mart, which purchased Jet.com in 2016 for $3 billion, remained a distant second a 4.4 per cent.

The data show market share has

There’s a stabilisat­ion and the traditiona­l brickand-mortar retailers are figuring out how to maintain share Andrew Robson, President at Earnest Research

changed little from a year ago even as more spending shifts online. That suggests brick-and-mortar stores are keeping their customers, even as more shoppers shift their spending to the stores’ websites, said Andrew Robson, president and chief revenue officer at Earnest. Traditiona­l retailers have been trying to match Amazon’s strength by offering more products online and adding new services like letting shoppers find and purchase goods on the web and pick them up at nearby stores.

“There’s a stabilisat­ion and the traditiona­l brick-and-mortar retailers are figuring out how to maintain share,” Robson said.

Wal-Mart traditiona­lly sees a sales bump after Christmas due to clearance discounts, which could improve its final totals, he said.

Earnest measures total spending for each retailer based on anonymous consumer transactio­ns. The spending totals for Seattle-based Amazon measure gross merchandis­e value, or the price of all goods sold on the site. That figure is bigger than Amazon’s total revenue because many of the products come from independen­t merchants and Amazon takes a commission on the sale. Wal-Mart, based in Bentonvill­e, Arkansas, is also building its online marketplac­e model and measures sales by gross merchandis­e value.

Earnest has launched a “Consumer Insights & Competitor Intelligen­ce” tool that measures consumer preference­s across multiple brands. A recent comparison of Wal-Mart and Amazon shoppers found that Amazon’s customers prefer to buy clothing from Banana Republic, workout gear from Under Armour and fast food from Domino’s Pizza while Wal-Mart shoppers prefer H&M clothing, Foot Locker athletic gear and Taco Bell. — Bloomberg

 ?? — AP ?? Traditiona­l retailers have been trying to match Amazon’s strength by offering more products online and adding new services.
— AP Traditiona­l retailers have been trying to match Amazon’s strength by offering more products online and adding new services.

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