Stores get last-minute holiday sales surge, but fate of season remains uncertain

By Anne Dinnocenzio, AP
Thursday, December 24, 2009

Shoppers give stores last-minute sales surge

NEW YORK — Shoppers appear to have given the nation’s stores a needed last-minute sales surge.

Early readings from Toys R Us, Sears Holdings Corp. and several mall operators show packed stores on Christmas Eve following a busy week fueled by shoppers who delayed buying, waiting for bigger discounts that never came or slowed by last weekend’s big East Coast snowstorm.

Stores are counting on these stragglers in a season that so far appears slightly better than last year’s disaster. The jury is still out, because the week after Christmas accounts for about 15 percent of sales as gift card-toting shoppers return to malls.

“The procrastinators were really out in force,” says David Bassuk, managing director in the retail practice of AlixPartners, a global business advisory firm. “But I think retailers needed to be more aggressive to fight for those sales. A lot of people are still willing to hold out until after Christmas because the deals weren’t as good.”

A Christmas Eve snowstorm in the nation’s heartland were slowing some shoppers after snarling roads in the mountain states a day earlier.

At the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minn., shoppers were scarce and those who showed up had entire stores to themselves.

Steve Burns, 42, and his 15-year-old daughter, Amber, of Hastings, Minn., took advantage of the empty stores to browse for shirts and other last-minute gifts. Burns said the snow wasn’t a problem and traffic was light because others stayed home.

“It doesn’t bother me any,” he said.

Some shoppers had challenges finding what they wanted as stores had slashed their inventories heading into the season. An Ann Taylor store at Westside Pavilion in West Los Angeles pulled in 33 cartons of January merchandise earlier than planned, according to Rebecca Stenholm, a company spokesman at the mall’s operator, Macerich Co.

Joe Roberts, 59, left a RadioShack at a mall in Madison, Wis., with a huge smile and the PlayStation3 his teenage son insisted on for Christmas.

He said he delayed making the $300 purchase because of economic concerns. A self-employed designer of manufacturing equipment, Roberts is getting less business every year and his wife might soon lose her job as an office manager.

“I don’t feel good about our outlook,” he said.

Roberts said they nonetheless decided Wednesday to grant their son’s wish, but then learned the video-game system was sold out at Best Buy, Walmart and other stores. Roberts finally connected with RadioShack early Thursday and braved icy roads to buy the store’s last one.

Snowy weather can take a toll on sales. Research firm ShopperTrak reported Saturday’s snow helped fuel a 12.6 percent drop in sales Saturday compared with a year earlier.

Wally Brewster, spokesman at General Growth Properties said merchants in his centers said they had made up for lost sales. Still, he expects overall holiday sales will be only about even with a year ago.

Caution remained. Karen MacDonald, spokesman for mall operator Taubman Centers Inc., noted that stores said many shoppers, remembering the 80 to 90 percent clearance sales they found last year, were asking whether the discounts were going to get any deeper.

And Macerich’s Stenholm reported that more people were using cash to pay for gift cards than a year ago, reflecting tight credit and a desire to pay down debt.

The full picture won’t be known until merchants report December sales Jan. 7. But most expect merchants’ fourth-quarter profits should be intact because they didn’t have to cut prices more than they’d planned as they were cushioned by lean inventories.

ShopperTrak is sticking to its prediction for a 1.6 percent gain, compared with a 5.9 percent drop a year ago.

The National Retail Federation expects that total retail sales will slip 1 percent, though some experts say that might be a bit too cautious. A year ago, they fell 3.4 percent by the trade group’s calculations.

Those concerns were far from most shoppers’ minds, though.

Otis Tyler got up early Thursday to take a 12-mile boat ride from his home on Smith Island in Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay to buy his Christmas gifts. From there, he drove 40 minutes to The Centre at Salisbury, Md., hoping to pick up gift cards for his wife and daughter-in-law.

“I always like to do it on Christmas Eve,” said Tyler, 60. “It’s something I’ve been doing a long time. It’s the hustle and bustle that I like.”

____

AP Retail Writers Emily Fredrix in Aurora, Ohio, and Ashley M. Heher in Salisbury, Md.; and AP Writers Martiga Lohn in Minneapolis and Ryan J. Foley in Madison, Wis., contributed to this report.

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