The Day

Best Christmas in a decade still leaves some stores behind

- By MATT TOWNSEND and LINDSEY RUPP

The good news for U.S. retailers is that the just-ended Christmas shopping season was probably the best one in a decade. The bad news? Some chains are still struggling to benefit from the industry's upswing.

The owner of Victoria's Secret posted disappoint­ing sales for December, and preliminar­y Macy's results didn't thrill investors on Thursday. J.C. Penney also got a tepid reaction to its holiday performanc­e, despite same-store sales climbing 3.4 percent over the last nine weeks of the year.

Consumer confidence is high, unemployme­nt is low, and Americans are increasing spending -- with some third-party data showing holiday purchases up about 5 percent. But what Christmas 2017 may end up crystalizi­ng is that a rising tide doesn't lift all boats. A few major retailers, including Amazon.com Inc., Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Home Depot Inc., are expected to reap an oversized share of the gains.

For department-store chains and apparel sellers, it may be increasing­ly hard to please investors -- leading to more doomsday talk for the brick-and-mortar sector.

“The money and the sales are gravitatin­g toward fewer and fewer players,” said Ken Perkins, president of research firm Retail Metrics Inc. “There are a lot of tailwinds behind these retailers, but they aren't generating a whole lot of profit growth.”

The uncertaint­ies have kept Wall Street analysts from fully feeling the Christmas cheer. They have estimated that retail earnings will rise a tepid 2.7 percent in the fourth quarter, according to Retail Metrics. The forecast climbed half a percentage point over the past month, but it's still far from the 11 percent profit gain expected for the entire Standard & Poor's 500 Index.

Macy's and J.C. Penney both saw their shares plunge last year, leaving room for upside if their holiday seasons were a pleasant surprise. But so far, their results haven't been enough to elate investors.

Macy's reported samestore sales growth of 1.1 percent for November and December. It also announced the closing of 11 stores, four of which had previously been disclosed. The shares were little changed in early trading on Thursday.

At J.C. Penney, shares also were roughly flat in the wake of its holiday sales update. That's despite a rosy tone by Chief Executive Officer Marvin Ellison, who sees apparel and other categories rebounding.

Broadly speaking, there's plenty for investors to be excited about. Craig Johnson, head of Customer Growth Partners, predicted last month that holiday sales would gain 5.6 percent. That would be the best growth since 2005. The industry posted a 6.1 percent increase that year, when the economy was still thriving and a hot housing market was boosting spending.

“This retail recovery this season is about as good as it gets,” Johnson said. “It was a stellar season.”

Still, the holiday period was starkly different than it was in 2005. Chains in enclosed malls, which are anchored by struggling department stores, are still seeing fewer visitors.

Those disparitie­s played out in December, according to First Data's SpendTrend. Same-store sales at department stores through Dec. 25 declined more than 6 percent. Men's and women's clothing chains fell 1 percent. Meanwhile, discounter­s, shoe stores, electronic­s outlets and luxury brands all gained.

 ?? DANIEL ACKER/BLOOMBERG ?? Shoppers carry Victoria’s Secret stores pink bags while walking through the Magnificen­t Mile commercial district in Chicago on Dec. 29.
DANIEL ACKER/BLOOMBERG Shoppers carry Victoria’s Secret stores pink bags while walking through the Magnificen­t Mile commercial district in Chicago on Dec. 29.

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