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Bleak Friday for retailers

Posted Nov 28 2008, 08:40 AM by Minyanville
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This year's Black Friday won't be so sunny for the nation's retailers.

Black Friday, the first shopping day after Thanksgiving and the traditional kickoff to the holiday shopping season, is often the day that nudges retailers into profitability for the first time of the year. Black Friday doesn't forecast holiday sales, but is often a good gauge of shoppers' willingness to spend. Last year, the weekend after Thanksgiving totaled about 10% of holiday sales.

This year isn't looking good amid the credit crunch and declining consumer confidence. Many retailers stress sales in an effort to get what they believe will be reluctant shoppers through the front door.

In general, analysts look for flat-to-declining sales this holiday season. The dollar total may be up thanks to inflation, but unit sales are expected to fall about 1%. The Nielsen Consumer Household survey found that 33% of the nation's households across all income levels are likely to spend less this holiday season.

Retail chains are extending hours by opening unusually early, or keeping door open until midnight. Market segmentation, sharply defined categories and retail channels will be vital to preventing a downbeat year from becoming a disaster.

Just about everyone is getting into the act this year: Wal-Mart will try to entice shoppers with a Blu-ray player for $128. Best Buy plans to offer coffee and donuts for shoppers lining up before it opens its doors at 5:00 a.m. Target will give customers store maps showing the location of sale items.

But sales and endless ballyhoo may not be enough to boost sales. Plunging home prices makes people feel poor. And the unemployment rate is now 6.5%, up from 6.1% in October, which leads many people to sit on their money.

Unfortunately, declining retail sales mean less sales tax revenue for state and local governments. Many states and cities overspent during the boom years and now face a budget crunch.

Last year's holiday online sales were up about 19% over 2006. The forecast for online sales ranges from a slower rate of increase to a slight decline Forrester Research expects online retail spending to total $44 billion in November and December, up just 12% from last year.

Here's betting Black Friday opens strong, but sales activity declines throughout the weekend.

Top Stocks blogging partner Todd Harrison is founder & CEO of Minyanville.com. This post was written by Minyanville Contributor Scott Reeves.

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Comments

 

I cannot stand it any more!!!  It seems Mr. Reeves refuses to see anything positive coming on the horizon.  Even this years expected online sales (projected UP 12% over last years 19% increase, that's 31% over two years ago!!!) is painted in a negative fashion.   Mr. Reeves, are you related to Mr. Scrooge?  Bah Humbug and all that!   Or are you truly wishing the entire economy falls off the cliff and gets the whole thing over with?  I think some people out there really do wish for something worse than the great depression!  That way the NEW WORLD ORDER can be set in place and we all can serve the LEADERSHIP that have lead us to believe we all need saving and only government can help!  So, are you one of them, Mr. Reeves?  Are you ILLUMINATTI?

cvx and cop make a better pair. xom is so large it stands by itself.

Things didn't look to bleak where I was. Ton's of shoppers everywhere, long lines and people spending money. The media is too gloomy. As long as people have jobs they're going to spend for Christmas. The unemployment rate is only about 6%... let's call it 7% so that means 93% of people have jobs. I saw a steady stream of people walking out of the apple store today with brand new macbooks. Enough doom and gloom people... we're gonna survive! http://www.generationyinvestor.com

Things didn't look to bleak where I was.  Ton's of shoppers everywhere, long lines and people spending money.  The media is too gloomy.  As long as people have jobs they're going to spend for Christmas.  The unemployment rate is only about 6%... let's call it 7% so that means 93% of people have jobs.  I saw a steady stream of people walking out of the apple store today with brand new macbooks.  Enough doom and gloom people... we're gonna survive!  www.generationyinvestor.com

My business as a whole was up 20% over last year until the news began reporting all of the doom and gloom and negative things.  We are located in Dallas, which has one of the strongest economies in the US.  Now everyone is worried that the sky will fall and they will be without a house by Christmas.  Are you kidding me?  My business has now fallen to 35% of our 2007 numbers.  Pay attention media people, now I can't afford to spend $50,000 a month advertising with you because you killed our business!!!!

According to me the best way to boost the economy is to create jobs. when you create jobs people can stay in their houses they can have money to spend in something else. I don't believe in bailing out companies can solve the economic problem. we have to find out the best solution otherwise you will see the rate of unemployment raise up.

This is the kind of article that scares people, and they need to stop. When people see an article of doom they are drawn to it and unfortunatly believe it. I work in retail and black Friday was a mad house! I work in a pretty well off area, so if it was a mad house here I don't even want to imagine what it was like other places. The media has influenced much of this crisis and they will keep doing it because their paychecks increase with our panic. Don't buy into it.

I live in Nebraska and have 2 jobs and havent changed much how I spend, watched it closer when gas  was higher but I agree cut the doom and gloom media people!!and here's a idea lets all stop buying papers and watching the news maybe when their income or job is lost they will stop scaring everyone all the stores in my area were packed I didnt even go out and if there is no one shopping how did that security guard lose his life at walmart?? HE GOT RAN OVER BY THE MASS CROWD!!!!!

Maybe we should have elected Howard Stern as the new president?

Ya'll are killing me. Yea, let's just shoot the mesenger. Forget the fact that the WORLD economy is in the midst of a massive deleveraging, along with U.S. corporations and yes U.S. citizens. The doom and gloom media is just reporting what it sees. The media could lie to us(more than they normally do) and it might help, but the problems will still be there.

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