Holiday Season May Already Be Over For Frantic Retailers

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

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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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I am so glad that I live in a country that supports Mom and Pop and small businesses and doesn't allow big box stores in.

We are still thriving here compared to the USA because people here actually SAVE. We also don't go nuts at Xmas......­....its a family holiday here. Not even religious because most of us are agnostics or atheists.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:45 AM on 11/28/2008

well where are you? I may want to join you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:35 AM on 11/28/2008
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Apparently, Sweden.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:24 AM on 11/28/2008
- aweissnet I'm a Fan of aweissnet 25 fans permalink
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Me too. And that is not a joke.

Probably Mexico.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:24 PM on 11/28/2008
- DCinFrance I'm a Fan of DCinFrance 33 fans permalink
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We have only postponed what was coming at the beginning of the century, and in doing so have made things worse. How did we postpone it? Consumer spending. Where did the money come from to fuel that spending? Credit. What secured that credit? Some of it nothing--consumer credit--but much of it was mortgage lending; that taking out of the second (or third) mortgage to buy more 'stuff'. At this point, people can open their wallets all they wish--they are empty. In a word, it's not only the holiday shopping season that's over. It's over, period.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:44 AM on 11/28/2008

That Postponement is called Status Quo and Status Quo has Momentum to it and Momentum resists Change....­get it? (hint: we are being dragged kicking and screaming into the 21st century that we failed to prepare for and glide gently into)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:16 AM on 11/28/2008

What I am really getting from this report is that the world produces too much and for the first time the consumers have decided not to buy all of it. I hope we can look forward to an economy that shrinks to the size we need, not the size our eyes and stomachs want.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:41 AM on 11/28/2008

Maybe.....­....but we still have large segments of the population marginalized in a very material way. Many have no PC's, or cars, or many of the gadgets we see. It appears the working class, the ones that fed the monster, are running out of cash and credit, as they lose their jobs. We have not created jobs for so long and have focused on prosperity through increases in productivity, not increases in demand per capita.
I truly feel that the economy of our nation is an unstoppable machine if properly regulated. Left to the ways of the corporations, we have insanity on a large scale, and the moving upward of so much wealth there isn't enough currency to cover it all. What it amounts to is the government must stop drilling holes in the hull, stop trying to create a cascade of job losses. Paulsons actions are designed to prevent any possible recovery of the markets, and most investors are now getting that. Grover Norquist with a bald head.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:21 AM on 11/28/2008

IN Sweden in 1998 the govt gave away free computers if people would get online.

Virtually EVERYONE in northern Europe is online and without it we could not do our banking, shopping, etc.

We also have a much advanced infrastructure than the USA.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:42 AM on 11/28/2008

Your Government GAVE you something????? how can that be?
All we ever get from Our Government is SCREWED.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:18 AM on 11/28/2008
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We've bailed out the very investment Banks like Citigroup, Merrill Lynch, and even insurance companies like AIG..These are the very people who cut up Mortgage Hacked Securities and sold them worldwide in the largest Ponzi scam since Willie Sutton rob banks (7 in one day) in the 50s. These guys still have their jobs and instead of lending money they invest in Mergers and Acquisitions. Now we float another $700B for car loans, mortgages, credit cards and say hopefully this will work. Next we'll bail out car manufacturers and then move on to commercial real estate mortgages which is the next big Wall Street scare that hasn't been noticed so much.

The architect of all this? Senator Phil Gramm, your neighborhood de-regulator who made it easy for all of Wall Street and commercial, investment banks to leverage money at 30 to 1 instead of a reasonable 2-5 to one. Rave on Bush..He took a $5.5T surplus and made it a $10.7T national debt. We'll all crawl out of this sometime in 2020...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:53 AM on 11/28/2008

It's time to use the "Trickle Up" theory.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 AM on 11/28/2008
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Can someone explain to me how the trickle-down theory came about? I know it was apparently created by Milton Friedmann, but even he put restriction on financial institutions.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:19 AM on 11/28/2008

I live in Oregon, where our unemployment rate has jumped to 7.3% in less than a month and I keep seeing all these commercials as well for stores being open at 5 am. What for? People can't even afford food anymore and one of our downtown malls just filed for bankruptcy. I'm pretty sure we're going to be hearing that the whole Black Friday thing was a complete bust nationwide. The good news is that people seem to be learning their lesson with this recession. Hopefully, people will get rid of their credit cards altogether and take better care of their finances when all this is over.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 AM on 11/28/2008
- shockmagog I'm a Fan of shockmagog 137 fans permalink
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What can they do? All they can do is hope for the best.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:25 AM on 11/28/2008

They could have ordered less merchandis­e... ahhhwww... water down the bridge.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:42 AM on 11/28/2008
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Yeah, that part baffled me. It goes to show how CEO are thinking right now. Hellooo people shop more online than in store now

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 AM on 11/28/2008

Revolution

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:04 AM on 11/28/2008

It's funny...I keep hearing about the big sales tomorrow that are supposed to entice us out of bed and to the mall at 5AM..I saw no real deals, except one things I would never buy in an economy like this one. Why would I buy a TomTom when I can't afford to go anywhere?
Once again the retailers just didn;t get it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:10 AM on 11/28/2008
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I won't be buying anything tomorrow, will be making my own Christmas gifts and cards. I could care less if Walmart and the rest makes a profit. If anyone deserves my Christmas cash instead, it is my local small business.

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

well stated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:01 AM on 11/28/2008
- MrMostly I'm a Fan of MrMostly 2 fans permalink

When milk and bread go on sale, I'll get interested.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 AM on 11/28/2008

Give every American who pays their taxes 1 million dollars of the 700 billion dollars of our money and we will stimulate the economy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:05 AM on 11/28/2008

I like the way you think!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 AM on 11/28/2008
- MarkBoston I'm a Fan of MarkBoston 18 fans permalink
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Yeah these pricks never give us the "trickle up" break eh. They should have given US the money to pay off our credit card debt and/or our mortgages ... we would have benefited AND the banks would have ended up with the money in the end anyway ... WHY cant it flow through us first ???? The problem is that the American citizen has no lobbyists to wheel and deal on OUR behalf. Capitalism gone amuck

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:34 AM on 11/28/2008

I see my idea is catching on..."tric­kle up" is the way to go..the money will find it's way back to the banks,stock market, mortgage lenders, and retail markets very quickly.
$100,000 per taxpayer (under $250K per year) is about 12 trillion bucks (130 million taxpayers)­.......the battlecry shall be "TRICKLE UP"!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:11 AM on 11/28/2008
- fumerunner I'm a Fan of fumerunner 4 fans permalink

Just saw the annual Volvo Christmas commercial where some sap buys his wife a luxury car, puts a big red bow on it and surprises her outside their Neo-Rockwellian home. It's just unbelievable, isn't it? I mean all of this...thi­s Pavlovian ringing of the Christmas bell, drawing out the legions of zombie consumers to feed the machine while making them think that they're doing something selfless by buying their bratty, vapid teenager an Xbox360 or something.
--
I've always been uber-cynical at Christmas.­..this annual marching out of tacky decorations, bad food, insipid relatives and unspeakable ghastly music all in the name of what exactly? It's really time for many to say 'enough'! Christmas---and all of the myriad parasitical consumer emporiums---can kiss my t.ucchus. I'm not spending a dime on anything for anyone. And somewhat surprisingly, wife and friends are all in total agreement. I hope the skipping of Christmas that so many will undertake this year will become the norm regardless of the state of the economy.
--

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 AM on 11/28/2008

I've seen that (maybe a Lexus) commercial -- same thing.
It is unbelievable to me also. I concure on everything except the wife thing.
Don't have one of those --money saved again. Nothing against wives of course.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 AM on 11/28/2008
- truthforme I'm a Fan of truthforme 9 fans permalink

LOL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:18 AM on 11/28/2008
- readreza I'm a Fan of readreza 4 fans permalink

there's a difference between pragmtism at christmas, or even cynicism,
and being a complete d i c k... you certainly seem to be the latter. No gifts here, but food, decorations, family and really good music (we choose ours, as you do, and it's not ghastly)?? Absolutely.
Skip the spending, and the a*h*le attitude.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:51 AM on 11/28/2008

Exactly! The holidays can be beautiful without all the attitude. Make food as gifts. Wrap up something you bought, but never used. Volunteer your time to make someone happy, hug and kiss your family and friends, double-spike the eggnog and laugh like a ninny! (BTW- what exactly IS a "ninny"?) But cynicism? Life's way too short for that!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 11/28/2008

Can't even watch regular network TV w/o the usual "MACY'S OPEN AT 5:00 A.M. TOMORROW! GET THAT SPECIAL SOMEONE A DIAMOND RING FOR $399, NORMALLY RETAILING AT $1,499!"

To get to Macy's at 5:00 a.m., you'd have to be awake at the minimum by 4:00-4:15 a.m. If you wished a full eight-hours of sleep, you'd have to have head on pillow by 8 p.m., one hour ago PST. Hopefully, you'd've planned dinner late and be on a total L-Tryptophan induced coma to go out that early.

It's gross to have a retailer open so early after a holiday. I also have much sympathy for the employees of these stores.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 AM on 11/28/2008

I will have even more sympathy for the employees of Macy's if - as it seems to be expected - very few people will be piling through their doors at any time of the day, much less 5am.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 AM on 11/28/2008

one of the biggest marketing gimmicks is ....half price .

There must have been a helluva markup to begin with.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:03 AM on 11/28/2008
- iamsmart I'm a Fan of iamsmart 3 fans permalink

We are still in the era of reganism, Palinism, consumerism, and new world order. the economy is still very strong for the very wealthy among us. we need cheaper labor that is insourced and outsourced. american labor is too expensive for america to be competitive. we need to widen the wealth gap more.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:52 PM on 11/27/2008
- booboo111 I'm a Fan of booboo111 78 fans permalink
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I agree, there are still too many people employed, and those who are fortunate enough to still have jobs, are highly overpaid. In order to compete on the world market, we should start at the bottom and lower the minimum wage to approximate the Indian work force salary of 1.20 U.S. per month.Then we should disolve all unions, and if their members won't quit, the companies should go into bankruptcy and start over with new employees willing to work for the new minimum wage. The wealthy people at the top should dictate all economic policy, because they didn't get rich being stupid. They'll know what to do, especially the wall street investment bankers. I am confident that together we lazaire fare Milton Friedman capitalists will overcome.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 AM on 11/28/2008

Look, I think 'iamsmart' was being snarky - did you read the last sentence of his/her comment? 'We need to widen the wealth gap more'.

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

Milton , I pizz on your grave.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 AM on 11/28/2008
- Indy 44 I'm a Fan of Indy 44 17 fans permalink
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The era of Palinism? How much credit do you want to give her?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 AM on 11/28/2008
- shockmagog I'm a Fan of shockmagog 137 fans permalink
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She symbolizes all that is wrong with America in this day and age.

That's about it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:19 AM on 11/28/2008
- rinpochet I'm a Fan of rinpochet 40 fans permalink

Well, if yyou want the ultimate cheap labor, bring back slavery and show that labor is worth absolutely NOTHING! This country was built on the backs of slaves who made this country an industrial giant.

Do you really want to go there? How about putting national health care in place and taking that off the backs of the employers? That would be a start at leveling the playing field. The cost of labor isn't the major problem. The greed of international corporations is the problem.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 AM on 11/28/2008
- Dayahka I'm a Fan of Dayahka 32 fans permalink

If consumers wait a few weeks, the prices will be even lower. As for the retailers, well, don't we have far too many retail stores as it is? A few going under would be good as it gets rid of the clutter. And as for people losing their jobs, well we in fact need or will need workers for the new American economy that will arise after Jan. 20, so we in fact need a pool of unemployed people to draw the new workers from, so losing millions of jobs will be good because that will mean millions of people available for new jobs. So, let's hope that gobs and oodles of retailers fold and go out of business.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 PM on 11/27/2008
- twofish I'm a Fan of twofish 18 fans permalink

Too many retailers? The theme of this bailout season is consolidation (e.g. creation of more companies "too big to fail" trending toward monopolies). All we'll have left at the end of this is 3 banks, 2 insurance companies, and Wal-mart.

As for all those new jobs, I wouldn't hold my breath. It's easier said than done.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:04 AM on 11/28/2008
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I love driving an older car and choosing to not have payments. Shopping second-hand and multiple markdowns has always been fun ~ as is cooking all our meals from scratch, from the healthiest ingredients I can find. Fishing for local salmon, trading some at the local chicken farm so we can both enjoy some variety, putting up local berries and baking for birthdays, and recycling like mad makes me content. I was not brought up with these values ~ I chose them for myself as a teen.

I write this to inspire others that having less really does encourage peace. I have raised three kids alone since the youngest was a newborn. The eldest is now working on her doctorate in atmospheric chemistry, with plans to write policy for biofuels, the next will be a lawyer for the downtrodden, and the youngest is learning the Arabic language, to add to her forensic studies and other languages, so she can help bring closure to others.

Things will undoubtedly get tougher before they can get better, so decide what makes you really happy now, because you might not be able to buy it that easily for a long time to come. We are going through an evolutionary quantum leap, and I know it will be better when we pull together with grace, tolerance, and compassion. As John Legend sings, "I searched for a leader - the leader was me"...

Happy thanksgiving!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 PM on 11/27/2008
- redplanet I'm a Fan of redplanet 13 fans permalink

Good job on the kids cmonppl! And for the values you gave them, the world will be a better place.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:33 PM on 11/27/2008
- Ric NYC I'm a Fan of Ric NYC 6 fans permalink

Happy Thanksgiving!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 AM on 11/28/2008

Ecotopia here We come !!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:16 AM on 11/28/2008
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