Santa's sleigh to be lighter as people buy fewer toys
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[November 15, 2023] By
Richa Naidu, Aishwarya Venugopal
LONDON (Reuters) -Santa Claus may not have as much to give this year
because hard up shoppers in Europe and the United States are
prioritizing food and household staples, global toy makers and industry
experts said.
Consumers worldwide have struggled to cope with high inflation and
sluggish economic growth. The holiday season, which begins with Black
Friday at the end of November and lasts roughly until the end of
December, is expected to be especially tough for retailers selling
discretionary items, executives say.
Favourites such as Barbie dolls, Transformers action figures and Hot
Wheels cars will still be at the top of children's wish list, said Loo
Wee Teck, consumer electronics industry manager at Euromonitor
International.
But many parents can't afford them this year, according to executives.
The top selling Barbie doll on Amazon, "Barbie Pop Reveal", currently
costs parents 19.99 pounds ($24.89). Meanwhile, Hot Wheels' Scorpion
play set was 35 pounds in 2020, according to parent blogs, but the same
toy is about 60 pounds on Amazon.co.uk this year.
"The most important thing for people this holiday is to have food on the
table for their families," Isaac Larian, CEO of Bratz doll maker MGA
Entertainment, said in an interview.
Toymakers Hasbro and Mattel have already warned of weaker industry
sales. But trading could prove even tougher than expected, executives at
four toymakers and experts told Reuters.
Larian is expecting holiday sales at his company, which also makes
Little Tikes toys and sells products across Europe and the United
States, to decline by 10-12% worldwide versus last year.
Demand in the lead up to Christmas will be "smaller" than last year,
said Nic Aldridge, managing director at Bandai, the maker of Tamagotchi
virtual pets.
Aldridge anticipates more price cuts as retailers look to shift older
products.
"The was an abundance of supply from previous years so there is a lot of
clearance stock and a lot of deep discounting," he said.
BLACK FRIDAY OFFERS CLUES
Global sales of action figures like Transformers and Spiderman are
projected to decline by 2% this year, Euromonitor
forecasts.
Anticipating the lower demand and already holding surplus inventory,
many retailers ordered in less product than usual this year. That means
products that are in demand may sell out quickly. Black Friday will give
retailers an early indication.
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People dressed as Santa and his elves play with children invited to
Hamleys toy store, as it announces its' potential top sellers for
the Christmas season, in London, Britain, September 21, 2023.
REUTERS/Peter Nicholls/File Photo
"We are seeing some early Black Friday sales start just now," Barbie
maker Mattel's president and chief commercial officer, Steve Totzke,
told Reuters on Monday.
Mattel's inventory levels at the end of the third quarter declined
by double-digit percentage versus the prior year, with weeks of
supply down high single digits, it said last month.
MGA Entertainment ordered and made less product, Larian said,
because it wanted to be "cautious and conservative" but now expects
to run out of some new toys as a result.
U.S. imports of toys fell by 32% year over year in the three months
to Aug. 31, 2023 in dollar terms, according to S&P Global Market
Intelligence's trade data firm Panjiva. That's usually a key
ordering period for holiday stock. Shipments by sea - measured by
number of containers - fell by 8% in September.
"The market for toys has been declining for the whole year," said
Florian Sieber, CEO of German toy maker Simba. Demand from consumers
in Europe is lower than last year and last year was already down
from the previous year, Sieber added.
Still, some anticipate a late surge in demand.
"We are expecting a good holiday season for Mattel," Totzke said.
"We expect to continue to gain share throughout the holiday season."
Frédérique Tutt, Global Toys Advisor at data firm Circana, formerly
NPD, said toy sales were down about 7% year-on-year in countries it
tracks in the first nine months of the year, but that she expects
shoppers to come through in the three weeks before Christmas. The
categories with the best performance to date are games and puzzles,
plush, building sets and vehicles, she said.
"There'll be some money set aside for toys," said Jerry Storch,
chief executive officer of consultancy Storch Advisors and former
CEO of Toys-R-Us and Hudson's Bay Co. "But it's a reality that there
won't be as many toys sold this year as last year."
($1 = 0.8032 pounds)
(Reporting by Richa Naidu; Editing by Matt Scuffham)
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