This Saturday, not Black Friday, is when the real money is spent

Although Black Friday used to be America’s biggest single shopping day, the final Saturday before Christmas took the title four or five years ago as more retailers began their Black Friday sales on Thanksgiving Day — or weeks before.

U.S. shoppers will spend an estimated $26 billion on Dec. 22, beating the $24 billion they shelled out on the day after Thanksgiving, , said Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners.

“Black Friday is not quite the epic event it used to be,” Johnson said in an interview. As holiday sales inch earlier, demand gets “pulled forward from Black Friday proper.”

Tiffany's blue bag
A shopper carries a Tiffany & Co. bag outside the company's flagship store on Fifth Avenue in New York, U.S., on Monday, March 13, 2017. Tiffany & Co. is scheduled to release earnings figures on March 17. Photographer: Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg
Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg

Black Friday, now almost four weeks past, was still a wildly successful day for most retailers. With America sporting a growing economy, low fuel prices and rising wages, consumers spent big on the unofficial holiday. More than 165 million U.S. consumers shopped during the five-day Thanksgiving weekend, according to the National Retail Federation, spending $7.9 billion online on Cyber Monday alone, Adobe Analytics said. The buying surge helped boost retail-sales figures from the Commerce Department 0.2 percent in November, topping forecasts.

Super Saturday
On a single-day basis, however, this coming Saturday -- dubbed “Super Saturday” in some retail circles -- will be even bigger. According to the International Council of Shopping Centers, 44 percent of U.S. adults plan to shop for holiday presents or related items on Saturday, spending an average of $173 in-store and online. That’s up from the 38 percent who shopped on Super Saturday last year.

Part of that is because confident customers are spending more in total this season, but it’s also due to where Christmas falls on the calendar. With Dec. 25 landing on a Tuesday, there are two full travel days between Saturday and the official holiday, rather than the one travel day last year’s Monday Christmas offered. That gives procrastinating shoppers all day Saturday to spend before packing their bags for Sunday or Monday departures.

“If Super Saturday occurs and Christmas is Sunday, then it slows it down. It’s hard to buy gifts when you’re on an airplane,” Customer Growth Partners’s Johnson said. “The classic weekend is perfectly situated for all these procrastinators.”

Tiffany Blue
Luxury brands, like Tiffany & Co. and Prada SpA, will get an outsized share of that spending, Johnson said. That’s partially because a big charge made on Dec. 22 won’t appear until a January credit card statement, meaning it could be paid for with year-end bonuses arriving in early 2019. Late shoppers also tend to skew more male than traditional shoppers, though with 75 percent of overall shopping done by women, plenty of female customers will also be making Super Saturday runs, Johnson said.

More that 40 percent of people shopping this coming weekend still plan to go into physical stores, ICSC said, even though some online orders placed on Saturday could still arrive by Christmas Eve.

But for those 24 percent of adult shoppers who ICSC says will do some shopping on Dec. 24, rest assured: Companies are ready to sell every last stocking stuffer. Target Corp., which will keep all stores open Christmas Eve from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m., will let shoppers who order online before 6 p.m. on Dec. 24 pick up in stores until closing time.

And what if Dec. 25 rolls around and you’ve still forgotten to shop? Starbucks Corp. says it has you covered: Many of its locations will be open on Christmas Day and selling mugs, coffee beans and gift cards to those last-minute shoppers truly cutting it close.

Bloomberg News
Retailers
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