New York Daily News

About face! Masks are making a return to store shelves: pros

- BY ANNE D’INNOCENZIO

NEW YORK — Masks, which had started to disappear from store shelves, may be front and center again.

A spot check of businesses and other data sources is showing that mask sales have been rising in recent weeks as Americans worry about the surging cases of the delta variant of the coronaviru­s. Retail analysts expect mask sales will get another jolt after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week changed course on some masking guidelines, recommendi­ng that even vaccinated people return to wearing masks indoors in parts of the country where the cases are surging.

Sales of masks rose 24% for the week ended Tuesday, compared to the prior week, reversing weekly declines since May, according to the Adobe Digital Economy Index. San

Francisco-based grocery delivery company Instacart said mask sales via its online platform have increased since the Fourth of July weekend, reversing a decline that had begun in April. And Google reports that searches for the term “masks” doubled since the CDC announceme­nt.

The scenario marks a shift from the past two months when masks were getting heavily discounted and were being pushed to the side on the sales floor following the CDC move to relax guidance on masks in May. Even before then, data from NielsenIQ shows that mask sales started to consistent­ly decline weekly since early April, going from $101 million worth of masks to roughly $37 million for the week ended July 3. It doesn’t yet have July sales figures.

“People were just not buying them — masks were really fading out,” said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail. He noted that even as consumers

go back to buying masks, the mask business is still not going to be as big as last year during the height of COVID-19. He noted that stores face challenges in determinin­g how much they should order.

“No one actually wants to go out and make another big

commitment,” he said.

For many stores looking to generate sales in an overall retail sales slump last year, masks were a bright spot. Gap, along with its portfolio of brands including Old Navy and Athleta, as well as Etsy made millions of dollars on masks.

Etsy, a global online marketplac­e for handmade goods, has seen its masks go from 14% of gross merchandis­e sales in the second quarter of 2020 to less than 3% in the first quarter of 2021.

Since the onset of the pandemic, 3M Co. increased its annual production of N95 masks fourfold to 2.5 billion by building extra capacity. It said that global demand reached its peak in the first quarter of this year, which included stockpilin­g from government­s and hospitals. It’s now seeing a decelerati­on in overall health care demand and is adjusting production, increasing supply to industrial and consumer outlets while continuing to prioritize health care workers in the geographie­s seeing increased COVID-19 cases and hospitaliz­ation rates.

But 3M CEO Mike Roman said it is “prepared to increase production in response to COVID-19-related needs.”

 ??  ?? A merchant displays masks for sale last year in Los Angeles. Retail analysts expect mask sales will get another jolt after the feds said the COVID delta variant is spreading fast among the unvaccinat­ed.
A merchant displays masks for sale last year in Los Angeles. Retail analysts expect mask sales will get another jolt after the feds said the COVID delta variant is spreading fast among the unvaccinat­ed.

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