Target holiday shopper traffic growth topped Walmart, Best Buy -data
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[January 06, 2022] By
Richa Naidu
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Shopper foot traffic
grew at Target during the recent holiday season compared with two years
earlier, while visits to both Walmart and Best Buy stores fell overall,
according to data provided exclusively to Reuters measuring shopper
visits from Nov. 1 to Dec. 25.
The store data could provide early clues to help investors separate
winners from losers after a holiday season marked by the coronavirus
pandemic and inventory shortages arising from a supply chain logjam.
Shopper traffic at Target stores rose 6.2% through the holiday period
compared with two years ago, pre-pandemic, according to Placer.ai, a
research firm that collects anonymized location data from 30 million
mobile devices across the country. At rivals Walmart Inc and Best Buy Co
Inc, traffic declined by 0.1% and 11.5%, respectively, the data shows.
For a related graphic on early shopping, Covid-19 fears hurt holiday
traffic, click
https://graphics.reuters.com/RETAIL-HOLIDAYSHOPPING/USA/
byprjmlrype/
chart.png
Target, Walmart and Best Buy declined to comment.
U.S. November-December traffic was also eroded by people shopping
earlier than usual in the 2021 holiday season.
Marshal Cohen, NPD Group’s head retail analyst, said traffic data is
helpful to understand whether people are going to stores and making
so-called impulse purchases that account for roughly 25% of retailers’
holiday sales.
Still, Cohen said that people worried about COVID-19 have changed the
way they shop, increasingly going online which is “a challenge” for some
retailers.
According to Refinitiv I/B/E/S, Target’s holiday quarter sales are
expected to rise by more than a third versus 2019, while Walmart’s
revenue is forecast to rise by about 7% and Best Buy sales are expected
rise by about 10%.
Target store traffic increased in every part of the country except
Hawaii and Washington D.C., with footfall rising nearly 24% in Vermont
and Idaho, compared with 2019, according to Placer.ai.
For a related graphic on Target holiday foot traffic jumps across the
country, click
https://graphics.reuters.com/RETAIL-HOLIDAYSHOPPING/USA/
wpkrkdddvm/
chart.png
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Holiday shoppers look for deals at the Pentagon City Mall in
Arlington, Virginia, U.S., November 29, 2019. REUTERS/Loren Elliott
Despite Target’s strong holiday season traffic, the retailer's fourth-quarter
profit margin is expected to narrow to 25.35% from 27.10% two years ago, due in
part to supply-chain logjams.
WHERE PEOPLE SHOPPED
Walmart traffic declined in 20 states – mostly coastal areas, with the retailer
harder hit in Florida, New Jersey, Maryland and Delaware. It had higher traffic
in several parts of the country, with shoppers going to its stores in many
midwestern and southern states.
For a related graphic on, click
https://graphics.reuters.com/RETAIL-HOLIDAYSHOPPING/USA/
akvezeqqwpr/
chart.png
Best Buy’s footfall fell in all but four U.S. states during the period. Analysts
have said the electronics retailer was likely unable to source enough products,
including TVs and consoles, amid a global chip shortage.
For a related graphic, click
https://graphics.reuters.com/RETAIL-HOLIDAYSHOPPING/USA/
akpezeqwjvr/
chart.png
Traffic does not always reflect trends in sales. “It's very hard to draw a
straight line between store traffic and total sales and retail,” said John
Mercer, advisory firm Coresight Research’s head of global research.
Overall foot traffic to U.S. stores fell each week from Nov. 1 to Dec. 25
compared with the same weeks in pre-pandemic 2019, according to data from
Sensormatic.
“Ever since the COVID lifestyle began, Target has pretty much led the way,”
Cohen said. “They’ve had fewer out-of-stocks; they were aggressive with
promotions even when Amazon minimized them; they invested in private-label
merchandise; they’ve been a leader in curbside and buy-online-pick-up-in-store.”
(Reporting by Richa Naidu in Chicago; Editing by Vanessa O'Connell and Matthew
Lewis)
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