Los Angeles Times

Prime Day steals rivals’ Black Friday spotlight

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Amazon. com Inc.’ s twoday Prime Day sale kicked off Tuesday and is expected to give the world’s largest ecommerce company an early advantage over bricks- andmortar rivals still contending with pandemic- spooked consumers wary of battling Black Friday crowds.

With Prime Day delayed to October from July this year, Amazon single- handedly could yank the pivotal holiday season forward — a long- predicted “Christmas creep.” More than 3 in 4 consumers plan to shop earlier this year than a year ago, with a third citing health and safety concerns, according to an Internatio­nal Council of Shopping Centers survey released Friday. Meanwhile a Harris Poll conducted with Bloomberg found that almost half of consumers planned to do most or all of their shopping on the web.

It’s a winning combinatio­n for Amazon, which this year hired more than 175,000 people for its sprawling network of fulfillmen­t centers after a spike in online orders brief ly overwhelme­d the company, forcing it to delay some deliveries. Amazon reported record profit last quarter, and investors have pushed the shares up some 85% this year, giving the company a market value of about $ 1.7 trillion.

“This is unpreceden­ted demand,” said Andrew Lipsman, an analyst at EMarketer Inc. who expects online spending of almost $ 10 billion over the two- day period, with more than $ 6 billion spent on Amazon. “Holiday spending will keep shifting from brick- and- mortar stores to online, and Amazon is very well aligned with those trends.”

Amazon’s delivery machine, conceived for convenienc­e, now offers the added benefit of safety compared with in- store shopping. Consumers initially turned to the company to stock up on some basics in April. Then they needed electronic­s to help families work and attend school from home.

Now come the holidays, Amazon’s busiest time of year. That means Amazon could continue to generate double- digit sales growth despite a weak job market and congressio­nal gridlock over further stimulus packages such as $ 600 weekly unemployme­nt assistance that expired over the summer.

Prime members who haven’t lost their jobs could actually have a little extra to spend and feel the urge to splurge because most households have cut back on travel, eating out and other expenses, said Jack Kleinhenz, chief economist at the National Retail Federation.

“People might just have more confidence of buying a little more and thinking, ‘ Oh, I owe it to myself in a tough time,’ ” he said.

Amazon’s competitor­s that still get most revenue in stores have to balance drumming up business with protecting public health. Eight in 10 shoppers say they’re concerned packed stores could spread COVID- 19, meaning retailers that aren’t offering deals online could lose out.

The industry for weeks has been trying to coax consumers to spend earlier. Executives from American Eagle Outfitters Inc. and Kohl’s Corp. said they expected earlier demand. Retail veteran Deborah Weinswig got two dozen retailers to start a new shopping holiday, “10.10,” to address capacity issues and encourage shoppers to buy earlier. Target Corp. and Walmart Inc. rolled out their promotiona­l days this week as well.

The latter last month started its own delivery service, Walmart+, and Target is shipping packages from its stores. But Amazon has 118 million U. S. Prime members, according to Consumer Intelligen­ce Research Partners, subscriber­s the company keeps loyal with delivery discounts and other perks. Amazon launched Prime Day in 2015 as a day of deals to attract new subscriber­s and hang on to existing ones.

For years, retailers have tried to get shoppers to spread out their purchases over the holiday by offering deals early and often. The phenomenon was dubbed “Christmas creep,” and it never entirely materializ­ed because many shoppers procrastin­ate, waiting for Black Friday and Thanksgivi­ng deals before getting serious about buying gifts.

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