Retail traffic data highlights 2022 holiday winners and losers
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[December 22, 2022] By
Arriana McLymore
NEW YORK (Reuters) - With three days to go before Christmas, retailers
across the United States and Europe face a turbulent end to a drawn-out,
mostly disappointing holiday shopping season.
Friday, Dec. 23, is slated to be the second-busiest U.S. shopping day of
this year behind Black Friday, according to data firm Sensormatic
Solutions. So far, shopper visits to many retail segments, including
apparel and electronics, are down year-over-year, according to
foot-traffic data from Placer.AI.
Rising costs of food, gas and rents are forcing consumers to be "more
selective," said R.J. Hottovy, head of Analytical Research at Placer.AI.
Shoppers bought less electronics, furniture and some types of clothing
compared to a year ago, according to NPD Group, a market research firm.
Overall U.S. spending on discretionary merchandise fell 5% during the
week of Dec. 10 from a year earlier.
Many stores dangled discounts earlier in the season to lure
inflation-weary consumers and clear out inventory.
Among the losers so far are fast-fashion retailer H&M, which waited too
long to raise prices, and department stores including Kohl’s and Best
Buy, which saw dramatic declines in foot traffic of at least 15%,
according to Placer.AI.
'AFFORDABLE SPLURGE'
Likely winners this season include sellers of beauty and skincare
products, such as Ulta, and mid-luxury accessories and handbags
retailers, as well as stores that managed to clear out excess inventory,
analysts and experts said.
Zara, the fast-fashion chain, aggressively raised prices this year
without turning off shoppers, while dollar stores including Dollar
General expanded their array of merchandise.
The beauty category has been an “affordable splurge” as people look for
makeup and fragrances they can wear to offices and parties, said Hilding
Anderson, head of retail strategy, North America, at digital consultancy
Publicis Sapient.
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People visit a retail store during the
holiday season in New York City, U.S., December 15, 2022.
REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
Sephora’s top competitor Ulta lifted its annual sales and profit
forecasts after luring customers with budget-friendly beauty
products, deals and an expanded partnership with Target.
Ulta “is proving itself as not only one of the more resilient names
in beauty, but a name with strong momentum," said Korinne Wolfmeyer,
Piper Sandler analyst.
Dollar stores have also shown momentum as more consumers traded
down. Discount and dollar stores saw visits up 1.1% year-over-year,
and up 7.8% compared to Super Saturday 2019, according to Placer.AI
foot-traffic data.
Dollar General's offerings of more food, holiday decor and
stocking-stuffers proved effective as customers bought $35 Christmas
trees and $1.25 ornaments.
Clothing retailers face higher costs for both materials and
shipping, but Zara owner Inditex is outperforming rivals after
selling higher-priced garments and enticing shoppers who might have
otherwise spent money at luxury stores.
"Zara's more premium positioning is helping in the current
environment," said RBC analyst Richard Chamberlain.
The world's largest fashion retailer lifted sales by 12% from a year
ago in the first five weeks of its fourth quarter, which started in
November, it said Wednesday.
(Reporting by Arriana McLymore in New York City; Additional
reporting by Deborah Sophia and Aishwarya Venugopal in Bengaluru,
India, and Corina Pons in Madrid; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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