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"Retailers may see some pent-up demand" as temperatures cool, but Ken Perkins, president of research firm RetailMetrics. added, "Retailers are going to have to be promotional. Most consumers are waiting. Unless (the bargains are) really enticing like 70 percent, consumers are going to hold off. It's going to be another late holiday season." The uneven fall selling period reflects how shoppers are increasingly spending only when they have a good reason to come out to the mall
-- whether it's for back-to-school or if they're out of something, such as milk. "The consumer environment remains choppy with increased promotional levels," UBS analyst Roxanne Meyer wrote in a report issued Monday. Economists expect holiday sales to be only modestly better than last year as shoppers remain cautious about spending. Unemployment is still stuck close to 10 percent, and consumers' confidence is still well below what's considered healthy. That's why more retailers are making an even bigger push to market Christmas starting in October. Sears Holdings Corp. and Amazon.com are already offering discounts they're pitching as "Black Friday" deals. Though retailers would like people to shop earlier, Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, is considered the holiday shopping kickoff. It got its name because it was historically the day that merchants sold enough merchandise to push them into profitability or "the black" for the year. However, despite a similar early holiday marketing push last year, consumers didn't do much buying until they came out for the big sales on the day after Thanksgiving, Perkins says.
[Associated
Press;
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