ShopperTrak estimated that, during the holiday shopping season of
November and December 2013, national retail sales increased 2.7 percent
although foot traffic decreased 14.6 percent when compared to the same
two months last year. The fourth consecutive annual sales increase for
the holiday arrived despite the shortened holiday season and extreme
weather in many areas of the country in the weeks leading up to
Christmas.
ShopperTrak’s initial data indicates shoppers spent $265.9 billion
during this period. The 2.7 percent increase is slightly better than
ShopperTrak’s early-season forecast of a 2.4 percent increase in sales.
The 2013 holiday season marked the fourth consecutive year with positive
GAFO retail sales, reflecting a growing economy.
“As we
anticipated, retailers saw a gain in sales compared to last year as the
economy continues to recover,” said ShopperTrak Founder Bill Martin.
“However, consumers took a break from shopping after Thanksgiving
weekend, so retailers were pressured to offer deep discounts and
promotions in the final week before Christmas to finish the holiday on a
positive note. In the future, retailers who promote throughout the
season will be more successful than those who take a hiatus in the week
or two after Thanksgiving. Promotions in early December offer retailers
an opportunity to capture sales earlier without having to offer more
extensive markdowns at the end of the season.”
Thanksgiving Day
shopping trends continue to evolve and impact sales of other shopping
days, most notably Black Friday. With more stores opening for longer
hours on Thanksgiving Day, Black Friday sales fell 13 percent compared
to Black Friday last year.
Strong Start and Finish to Shortened Season
Retailers
had a reduced window of time to capture peak holiday spending, with
only 25 days between Black Friday (Nov. 29) and Christmas this year,
compared to 31 days in 2012. Consequently, there were only four weekends
this holiday season compared to five last year. As a result, many
consumers began shopping early, taking advantage of retail promotions
and discounts early in November as well as during Thanksgiving and
“Black Weekend.” Severe weather conditions in many parts of the country
during the first two weekends in December also impacted in-store
shopping and pushed some consumers to purchase online during that final
stretch.
“Shoppers took a longer-than-normal break from shopping
in early December,” said Martin. “However, once consumers started to buy
again, they did so in force as retailers reduced prices. And, after
Christmas, gift cards came into play as shoppers looked to round out
their holiday tally before inventories were depleted.”
Following
the Thanksgiving boom – with Black Friday holding rank as the top sales
and traffic day of the season – shoppers held out for bigger bargains
closer to Christmas. This led retailers to offer more significant
promotions and discounts during the final days of December.
As a
result, the week ending Dec. 28 accounted for 15.5 percent of sales and
16 percent of all traffic for the holiday season. This is especially
noteworthy given most stores were closed on Christmas Day, so the sales
and traffic growth occurred during a six-day week. Similarly, this same
week contained four of the top 10 sales and traffic days, accounting
for 10.9 percent of holiday season sales and 11.5 percent of holiday
season traffic. The five days before Christmas, Dec. 20 through Dec. 24,
accounted for 14.2 percent of sales and 14.5 percent of holiday season
traffic.
ShopperTrak estimates that the strongest sales days were
Nov. 29, Dec. 21, Dec. 23, Dec. 14 and Dec. 22, in that order. Black
Friday, Nov. 29, also was the top traffic day, followed successively by
Dec. 21, Dec. 23, Dec. 22 and Dec. 14.
Increased Sales, Decreased Traffic Across Categories and Regions
In
line with the overall trend this season, the apparel and electronics
categories saw an increase in sales despite a traffic decrease. Sales in
the apparel and accessories category increased 3.5 percent, while
traffic decreased 0.6 percent compared to 2012. Sales at electronics and
wireless stores were up 4.8 percent, although traffic was down 12.9
percent year-over-year.
Compared to the 2012 holiday season,
sales in the Northeast, South and West were up 1.9 percent, 3.2 percent
and 5.1 percent, respectively. Sales in the Midwest were flat compared
to 2012. Traffic in the Midwest, Northeast, South and West was down 17.1
percent, 15.8 percent, 14.2 percent and 12.1 percent year-over-year,
respectively.
Moving Forward
In Q1 2014,
ShopperTrak estimates retail sales to increase 2.8 percent despite an
estimated 9 percent decrease in shopper traffic.
“We will
continue to see the trend of steady sales increases as consumer
confidence rises and the economy progresses,” said Martin. “And, while
foot traffic will continue to slow due to changing consumer patterns –
with more shoppers purchasing online or researching products online
before heading to stores – retailers must remember an overwhelming
majority of all retail sales in the U.S. will occur in brick-and-mortar
stores. Retailers who deliver a seamless customer experience both in the
store and across all channels will emerge ahead of the rest.”
View or download a “Holiday Wrap” infographic with retail store traffic and sales data from ShopperTrak via this link: http://bit.ly/1dRj5vw.
By press release
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