After-Christmas shopping unlikely to save season


Friday December 26, 12:54 am ET 


PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- There's holiday joy and post-holiday blues, but for the 
nation's retailers it's all been one big downer.
The holiday shopping season was one of the most dismal in years and even the 
after-Christmas period, when consumers normally rush to stores to use gift 
cards and seize on big sales, isn't expected to be enough to save retailers 
from a terrible year.

Holiday sales typically account for 30 percent to 50 percent of a retailer's 
annual total. But shoppers cut back their spending this year as they struggled 
with job cuts, home foreclosures, portfolio losses and other economic woes.

Analysts have kept slashing their holiday estimates. Michael P. Niemira, chief 
economist at the International Council of Shopping Centers, now expects that 
sales at established stores for November and December will fall 1.5 percent to 
2 percent -- which would make it the weakest holiday season since at least 
1969, when the index began.

According to preliminary data from SpendingPulse -- a division of MasterCard 
Advisors that tracks total sales paid for by credit card, checks and cash -- 
retail sales fell between 5.5 percent and 8 percent during the holiday season 
compared with last year. Excluding auto and gas sales, retail sales fell 
between 2 percent and 4 percent, according to SpendingPulse.

A better indicator of how retailers fared won't arrive until Jan. 8, when major 
stores report same-store sales, or sales at locations open at least a year, for 
December.

Retailers are still trying to entice consumers with big markdowns, extended 
hours and other perks.

"It has a Black Friday feel to it," said Tom Aiello, a spokesman for Sears and 
Kmart, likening the post-Christmas promotions to those found the day after 
Thanksgiving.

Sears stores are opening several hours early and offering doorbuster deals 
through noon. Shoppers can get jeans for less than $10 or special financing on 
exercise equipment to help keep their New Year's resolutions.

Kmart is cutting in half prices on necessities, such as fall and winter clothes 
for the family, and offering deals on seasonal decor.

Although gift cards sales overall are predicted to be down, Aiello said Sears 
and Kmart have not seen that and are expecting strong redemption. Retailers 
cannot record a sale on gift cards until they are redeemed.

Toys R Us said it is cutting prices by 60 percent on some brands the day after 
Christmas. And kids who didn't get the Hannah Montana doll they wanted may be 
able to find it for half off.

Other retailers such as Target are pushing online deals, rather than in-store 
promotions, more heavily in the post-holiday period. Target said it is putting 
thousands of items on clearance and making them eligible for free shipping the 
day after Christmas.

Others, like Wal-Mart Stores, are waiting until the weekend to make markdowns 
on items such as televisions, office and home goods but say they will continue 
in-store promotions of the week.

Several retailers said they will continue or add new promotions in January, as 
experts predict the recession will carry into 2009.



http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/081226/after_christmas_shopping.html






      

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