Holiday Season May Already Be Over For Frantic Retailers

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ANNE D'INNOCENZIO | November 27, 2008 04:33 AM EST | AP


Bree Madison shops for holiday gifts inside American Girl Place at The Grove Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2008, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Ric Francis)

NEW YORK — The holiday shopping season begins Friday with a blitz of early morning specials. For some merchants, though, it's practically over already.

Piles of jewelry, clothing and electric drills are bypassing store shelves and heading straight to liquidators by the caseload as stores try to save as much cash as they can.

Major department stores and mall-based chains have cut prices up to 70 percent to move out mounds of excess inventory stuck in the pipeline since the financial crisis hit in September and people snapped their wallets shut.

Big moves of merchandise happen every year _ but usually after Christmas. This year stores are desperate to shed inventory even before Thanksgiving.

"The holiday season is over. The reason? It just never got started," said Marshal Cohen, chief industry analyst at NPD Group, a market research firm. "How cheap things are doesn't bode well for holiday success."

The deep price cuts even on luxury brands _ think 40 percent off on $5,000 Chanel suits and 70 percent off on designer shoes at Saks Fifth Avenue and 40 percent off $695 Ralph Lauren leopard-printed pumps at Bloomingdale's _ are only good news for the dwindling pool of consumers who are comfortable enough financially to take advantage of the deals.

Experts say discounts are only going to get even better as stores resort to more extreme measures to clear out unsold items. The value of coats and sweaters drops dramatically as the winter months wear on.

Still, there is some incentive for choosy consumers to buy early: increasingly lean inventories mean that certain colors, sizes and styles may sell out early. For those who are open minded, it's a bargain hunter's dream.

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It wasn't supposed to be this bad. Stores, which typically place orders about four to seven months in advance, had cautiously planned their holiday inventories about 15 percent below last year's levels.

But because of the free fall in consumer spending, stores are now stuck with about 15 percent to 20 percent excess holiday inventory, estimated Burt P. Flickinger, managing director of Strategic Resource Group.

Richard D. Hastings, a consumer strategist with Global Hunter Securities, says the latest culprit _ fear of deflation _ is also causing stores to dump inventory. Clothing and other merchandise is worth less now than it was even three months ago.

"Prices are slipping too fast, and so by the time you sell the product, stores are not covering their operating expenses," he said.

But stores are only making matters worse. The more they discount and send to liquidators, the lower the prices become. Consequently, stores generate less in sales.

Still, in the current economy, they have no choice. Carrying inventory is a big expense, and stores need to preserve cash at a time of tightening credit.

At warehouses operated by Liquidity Services Inc., a leading online auction company for surplus goods, there are rows and rows of pallets of offloaded merchandise ranging from jewelry to consumer electronics.

At the company's Liquidation.com, which auctions surplus goods offered by stores and manufacturers to dollar stores and small businesses that sell on eBay, the number of auctions scheduled for the Thanksgiving weekend has soared to 2,100 _ eight times more than last Thanksgiving, said chief executive Bill Angrick.

In other words, what normally happens after Christmas is taking place this weekend, he said.

"This is about survival. This is not about muddling through the holiday season," Angrick said.

Inventory has doubled from a year ago at Overstock.com, which offers brand-name merchandise at discount prices, said CEO Patrick Byrne. Stores are unloading top-notch brands such as Gucci and Prada in recent weeks at a rate he's never seen in the company's nine-year history. And more is arriving by the truckload.

"It's like an avalanche," Byrne said.

The financial crisis, the meltdown in the stock market and cascading job losses have sent shoppers into full retreat. Even before the holiday season, stores were reporting the biggest drops in sales in decades.

Eileen Klockow, 41, doesn't expect to start her holiday shopping until mid-December, when the post-Thanksgiving rush ends and she can shop in leisure. An accountant from the Milwaukee suburb of Wauwatosa, Klockow said she's not procrastinating, just biding her time for sweeter deals.

"I'm waiting because I think sales will be better later in the month," she said.

How bad will the season ultimately be for stores? Mark Vitner, senior economist at Wachovia Corp., expects total retail sales to fall 0.5 percent for November and December. That would be the first decline in holiday sales since 1982.

In the last few Christmas seasons, analysts have worried about holiday sales making only weak gains. This year sales are expected to contract from a year ago, making this a do or die season for the weakest stores.

Profits are eroding quickly, and there have already been a string of bankruptcy liquidations from Mervyns LLC to Linens 'N Things. Circuit City Stores Inc. filed for bankruptcy protection this month, and analysts expect more to come.

Even for Overstock.com, there's a limit to all those Pradas it can buy.

Byrne noted that his buyers are becoming "gun-shy" as they calculate how much a pair of Prada shoes, for example, will be worth after Christmas if the discounts at stores get even deeper.

"If goods are not sold by Christmas, the value keeps going down," he said.

___

AP Retail Writers Ashley M. Heher in Chicago and Sarah Skidmore in Portland, Ore., and AP Business Writer Dinesh Ramde in Milwaukee contributed to this report.

NEW YORK — The holiday shopping season begins Friday with a blitz of early morning specials. For some merchants, though, it's practically over already. Piles of jewelry, clothing and electric d...
NEW YORK — The holiday shopping season begins Friday with a blitz of early morning specials. For some merchants, though, it's practically over already. Piles of jewelry, clothing and electric d...
 
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Don't blame the retailers for the prices..the taxes and fees are never ending. Phones and internet, utilities and permits are at a premium, cos it's "commercial". There is the business tax and the licensing fees, the matching contributions, insurance, health benefits. workmen's compensation, advertising, triple net, rising rents, brutal hours...oy vey! How is any small business going to make it through the first 3-5 years just to get a foothold?
Big businesses have the economy of scale, and they can work the system better,buying in bulk the cheaper goods. Mom and pops have a 90% failure rate. Why do you think the stores that gives you better local products and service can't make it? The odds are stacked against them.
Unless we can have a system that will nurture the truly small businesses, we are doomed to a world of homogenized crap sold at the rate that can offset the pound of flesh that the government wants for hanging up your shingle.
This is not the way to allow people to succeed in their entrepreneurial endeavors and create jobs. Give me quality and value and I will buy. But this junk that is out there...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:57 PM on 11/30/2008

What we need are more educated people. They would think about what they're buying, think about where it comes from, who is getting the money, etc. They'd be more supportive of local and small business. America has too many dummies that will but something because P Diddy did a commercial. But our education system ( along with healthcare and infrastructure etc) are a shambles from the last thirty years of Flood Up economics

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:01 AM on 12/01/2008
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From msjimmied above "...small business, we are doomed to a world of homogenized crap ... Give me quality and value and I will buy."

Check out the many small business consignment stores, resale shops that offer a variety of high quality items at reasonable prices. Many consignment stores are VERY picky about what they will accept. They know what their customers want and don't accept "crap" as you say.

Although resale shops may have only one size, you still save time because all the better brands are in one resale store rather than spread out all over the mall. Also, consignment store inventory changes daily with new arrivals.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 PM on 12/01/2008

I decided not to buy into the Cristmas Shopfest years ago. I make my own presents and cards - small presents geared towards what I know my friends like: herbal bath oils, or bottles of oil with garlic,rosemary, thyme for cooking and salads. Cushions with embroidered or appliqued designs, herb pillows, baskets of fruit and nuts, home made sweets, you name it. They're not expensive to make.

Why do kids expect the latest in computers or other expensive gadgets; why do people agonise about buying a present for every person they know; why is everyone struggling to pay off their credit cards in the months following Christmas. I'm not even a Christian but I fail to see why people buy in to the retailers' idea of what Christmas really is.

I'm no killjoy - I love Christmas parties like everyone else and I intend to make the most of the coming New Year. But really - do we have to get ourselves in hock to the credit card companies just to tell someone we love them?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:05 PM on 11/29/2008
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I'm seriously considering not doing Christmas at all. I broached the topic on Thanksgiving with my family, and I am beginning to feel quite strongly about this. That means--no cards, no wrapping paper, no presents, no unusual expenditures. Think of the quality time you can spend with your children and family that you're not shopping, wrapping, decorating.

It's NOT christmas here. Lots of homeless and hungry, and we may be next. Hunker down, folks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:11 PM on 11/28/2008
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My family discussed doing the exact same thing. We won't be getting each other presents - instead we will all get together for a nice meal and enjoy each others' company.

We are going to decommercialize our family's Christmas and get back to what the holiday should be about. Family.

Most of the stuff they try to sell us for Christmas is over-priced junk anyway, and allmost all of it is made in China or some economic free zone that exploits 3rd world labor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:33 PM on 11/29/2008

If we really want to exercise the last bit of power we have and actually be patriotic we shouldn't buy anything. The banks has gotten a bailout from the gov but now everyone is looking to the consumer to bailout the economy. I say NO. Make the economy adjust to us. Send a message that we need good jobs

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 AM on 11/28/2008

I'm a citizen first, and not just a consumer. No Walmart middleman is getting my money this year, for goods produced in other countries, when they could be made here and employ hundreds of thousands of people. The government is taking care of the banks and corporations, but I won't
bailout this economy on my dime. Not now. NOT EVER!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 11/28/2008

My heart just bleeds for the retailers and manufactuerers who can't sell their c r a p. What did they expect??? They shipped millions of our jobs overseas for cheap labor. Now we're unemployed and can't afford to buy their c r a p and they're all crying for a bailout. I hope they feel the pain as much as we do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:25 AM on 11/28/2008

How time flies - Just a year ago, there were reports in the NYT about sales lagging on Black Friday - Billo went nutzo - He was screaming about "Didn't they see all of those women hurling cash at the registers?" Ah, yes, the ol' "All is Well, All is Well", from Billo

So, Billo, how did Obama screw up this Black Friday?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:16 AM on 11/28/2008
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Someone on another thread thought it was liberals responsible for a Toys R Us shooting, for some reason. And elsewhere, it was the thronging masses that stampeded that man to death--they were likely gullible Obama voters who believed they'd get a middle-class tax cut.

Now where is that tax cut? Oh, right. He's not even in office!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:14 PM on 11/28/2008

I was in Washington in the mid-nineties. I met a man whose job had gone to India. He had a masters degree in computer programming. In India, the corporation could get a PhD for less than what he made per hour. He worked in a restaurant. Waiter was the only job he could get. The economy became truly global and the American people aren't dumb oblivious. Whether we realize it or not, we know it was time to hit the economic reset button. We said 'Change.'

We don't have the money for a big Christmas. A lot of the more secure are helping their kids, or parents, get by. We have personal medical bills we can't pay. Hundreds of thousands who chose to pay taxes to assure all Americans were fed, and expected to always do so, are in need of those taxes back in food stamps and help staying in their homes. We're helping with a lot of mortgages through our federal and state programs. New Mexico gives temporary aid for five years. A lot of unemployment accounts have already run out.

The most profitable business' became trading virtual money. So, they increased the amount that could be traded with credit. No more bailout. Use it to build something that will pay us a good salary and make our kids view education as worth the work and the money. Upgrade. We need to use our labor to regain our quality of life.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:02 AM on 11/28/2008

I am waiting for more deflation to kick in and will buy items next week. We are buying less and, with the switch to digital, need to upgrade tv, vcr, dvd-thingy so, we will consider them xmas presents. I dislike the blatant consumerism of the holidays and black Friday in particular. I have always been boring and frugal, which may be necessary for everyone to be this year. Mr. Paulson seems to think we have bottomless pockets of cash to hand out to the major banks, I'm holding onto my $$ a little longer if I can.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:56 AM on 11/28/2008

At last demand and prices are reaching an equilibrium point, but that point getting so low as to threaten deflation. This is happening in retail and is starting to happen in commercial real estate, residential real estate, autos, airlines, restaurants and fast-food chains, and all areas of the economy unseen by the end consumer. Finally the consumer, the buyer, and the renter are beginning to have some clout. Trouble is too much "clout" might be a sign of more serious dislocations yet to come.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:35 AM on 11/28/2008
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Heck it! I'll buy the documentary video: WWJB for Christmas. Rev. Billy said it best: Stop Shoppong

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:26 AM on 11/28/2008
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It's amazing to me when I see people interviewed on TV and they *cry* because they won't be able to spend recklessly for X-mas this year. It's a sickness.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:28 AM on 11/28/2008

We can argue numbers, we can argue philosophy, but we can't argue tha fact that Americans spending money on formerly American made products now made in China has finally reached the tipping point where the numbers no longer work.

I went to Bass Pro shops (as American as apple pie) last week, but everything except the guns are now made in China.

There are a million ways that we could have helped China serve it own billion+ population without shipping them all of our jobs, but that would have taken time. So the lobbyist's went to work on DC and sold them on this current crapola, which looked good until we, the American people, finally realized that our income was not keeping up with our credit. It worked great for awhile, but a service economy does not work.
Now we've created a situation where the only way we can compete (manufacturing and industrial wise) is to drop our wages to third world status.

Got revolution?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:26 AM on 11/28/2008
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Creating new jobs that won't be outsourced to China, created jobs that demand high skills not found anywhere else.

As I mentioned in several other posts, you lost your comparative advantage in these labor-intensive jobs, but to retain balance those jobs should have been replace by capital-intensive jobs, but instead you've replaced by other labor-intensive jobs(the service sector).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 AM on 11/28/2008
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How do we stop outsourcing? People need to boycott companies that do. We'd like the government to fix this, but ... can they fix anything? Have they?

We need to develop more backbone and principle and demand change through our own action. Instead of being manipulated, we need to do the manipulation, and watch the Corporations respond.

From what I've seen of the stampeding going on today, we just don't have that kind of joined purpose ...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:18 PM on 11/28/2008

There were tents in front of Best Buy last night at 6 PM!

Sarah Palin's STUPIDEST MOMENTS!

http://theliepolitic.com/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:26 AM on 11/28/2008

Can someone help me understand all this, the article states that consumer spending has 'gone into freefall', yet the senior economist at Wachovia expects retail sales to decline by 0.5% for November/December, presumably compared to the same period last year.
Now I realise that freefall can mean different amounts to different people, but 0.5% is freefall.??
It's one of the things that has puzzled me about the GDP figures during the current economic problems, the consumer is 70% of the economy, and where possible is currently cutting right back on expenditure, and yet this retrenchment has a marginal effect on GDP - It doesn't make sense.
I have to wonder if there is a huge fiddling of the figures going on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:57 AM on 11/28/2008

As a long time favorite author and purveyor of famous sayings once quipped: "There are lies, damn lies, and statistics".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:02 AM on 11/28/2008

Every year we hear the retailers complaining that sales are down. i stopped believing them years ago -- it's like listenen to a habitual liar. When all is said and done and the holdiay over, the numbers aren't down. It's a game they play. Should I believe them this year -- no. They've already been b.i.t.ch.ing a storm and and the holiday hadn't started. When are retailers going to learn -- people get tired of the same mind games they play. It's like the GOP election rule book for running an election -- it's old.

Now I feel that if the retailers would start selling stuff that was worth the money they are charging for it, people would definitely buy it. I love catching sales staff up in asking if it was made in US and they fall over themselves saying yes. Then turn it over or take it out of the box and it's China, Taiwan, Thailand, etc. Mostly C.r.a.p. that falls apart, wages were dirt cheap, materials questionable yet the stores have no problem charging $75 for something that cost $10 at most to make. The retailers, like Wall st., got too greedy. Look at name brands -- they mostly are NOT made in US but look at cost. They deserve to lose.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:36 AM on 11/28/2008

geez, I quoted Mark Twain, and the censors spammed it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:04 AM on 11/28/2008
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Could it have to do with the fact that your export numbers do not match up to the import numbers?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 AM on 11/28/2008

i think i want to live in sweden

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:51 AM on 11/28/2008
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So you want to pay high taxes? Don't be fool, they are also in dire times

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:14 AM on 11/28/2008

They get A LOT for their high taxes. And while they are affected by the global financial meltdown they will weather it better because their economy is not based on brainwashing people who already have enough to buy more, more, more.

It isn't taxes that bankrupts Americans, it's the conditioned compulsion to spend needlessly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 AM on 11/28/2008

There's a reason those countries are always in the top 5 in satisfaction of life, health care, education, free press. The thing we have here about taxes is dumb. What we need is our gov't to DO something with them instead of lining the pockets of the rich

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 11/28/2008
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It's not what you pay in taxes that matters, it's what is left in your pocket to pay for your roof/clothes/food at the end of the day.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:23 PM on 11/28/2008
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