U.S. retail sales are expected to inch up 1% to 1.5% to as much
as $1.15 trillion between November and January, led by a 25% to
35% rise in e-commerce sales, the consultancy firm said.
While the overall rise in sales would be slower than previous
years, Deloitte's U.S. retail and distribution leader Rod Sides
said a surprise increase in back-to-school spending and higher
savings rates than last year showed demand could be strong
between Thanksgiving and Christmas.
"We don't see many of the higher and upper middle income folks
being impacted by job losses, so we think for that group holiday
sales go up as much as 2% to 3%," Sides said.
Purchasing among lower income households will likely be flat to
up just 1%, as the coronavirus lingers and the health crisis
related government spending dries up.
Brick-and-mortar sales could fall as much as 3.4%.
Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of
U.S. economic activity, has shown signs of recovery, but July
figures were still about 4.6% below February levels.
Big box chains are expected gain the most in the holidays as
consumers consolidate shopping trips, Sides said, while
independent main street stores could struggle.
Walmart <WMT.N>, Target <TGT.N> and Home Depot <HD.N> have
already seen their sales surge during the pandemic as revenue
from their websites and apps showed unprecedented growth. But
analysts said their supply chains could come under immense
stress during the holidays.
Holiday sales last season rose 4.1%, compared to Deloitte's
estimated 4.5% to 5% increase.
(Graphic: Holiday Season Sales Growth Expected To Slow Despite
Online Boost,
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-HOLIDAYSHOPPING/
oakveodjdvr/chart.png)
(Reporting by Uday Sampath in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur)
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