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Holiday Shipping Deadlines: Web Retailers Extend Deadlines, See The Details

EMILY FREDRIX   12/21/09 05:25 PM ET   AP

Holiday Shopping Storm

Stores in the snow-battered East Coast may have been sparse this weekend, but shoppers kept spending online. Retailers spurred sales with new discounts and shipping offers to make sure gifts arrive by Christmas.

The storm that battered the East Coast, from the Carolinas to New York, may have put at least a $2 billion dent in "Super Saturday," which usually accounts for $15 billion worth of sales nationwide, according to weather research firm Planalytics.

Mall traffic was down 10 percent on Saturday, but it surged 65 percent Friday night as more people went out before the storm. Retailers that have must-have items like Toys R Us, Best Buy, and one-stop shops like Walmart are poised to recover the lost sales better than the rest of industry, weather research firm Planalytics said Monday.

But not all shopping was lost. Many shoppers like Tina Bashline turned on their computers to whittle down their Christmas lists. She bought gifts for eight people – the bulk of her holiday shopping – from her home in Newtown, Pa., where more than a foot of snow fell.

"You should have seen what I was wearing," she laughed. "My hair was unwashed. I had a big old ugly sweater on, with a credit card in one hand and an address book in the other hand."

She had been deleting e-mail offers of free shipping and other discounts this month, but on Saturday, with more offers pouring in from stores like Barnes & Noble and Staples, the 55-year-old figured she'd give them a chance.

Online retail sales rose 22.4 percent for the weekend compared with last year, Web research company Coremetrics said. On Saturday, sales were up 24.8 percent alone.

The firm also showed the average shopper spending and ordering more on Saturday, when the weather's effects were deepest, than Friday.

Even online sales Monday morning were strong as shoppers raced to make purchases so they could be delivered by Christmas.

"This teaches consumers that maybe those of us that procrastinate, we still have time to go online very close to Christmas," said John Squire, Coremetrics' chief strategy officer.

Retailers were ready to prod those sales along. Amazon.com extended the cutoff for standard shipping by one day through Monday, and offered free two-day shipping for select electronics products. It would not release figures for weekend traffic.

Macy's Web site is offering free shipping through Monday, and J.C. Penney through Tuesday.

Shoppers are busy hunting for last-minute deals. Retail Web traffic peaked at 2.9 million visitors per minute Saturday night, according to the Akamai Retail Net Usage Index. That was up from 1.9 million on the Saturday before Christmas in 2008, though that day – Dec. 20 – was closer to Christmas than this year.

The Sunday peak was 3.5 million visitors per minute, compared with 2.2 million on the Sunday before Christmas last year.

Monday's numbers were nearing those levels but hadn't peaked by late afternoon.

Now that the storm is largely gone, some bricks-and-mortar stores are extending early morning bargains that had been offered on Saturday through Wednesday. Scott Bernhardt of weather research firm Planalytics said he is seeing stores opening earlier and closing later and boosting more promotions to get people shopping. He said retailers can help make up sales by adding more hours to counteract the loss from Saturday.

Toys R Us is adding hours to some 300 stores along the East Coast and in other areas of the country to woo shoppers. Some stores will open as early as 6 a.m. and close at 1 a.m.

Les Morris, spokesman at mall operator Simon Property Group, noted the mall operator is thinking of extending hours beyond what was planned for early this week to accommodate customers.

___

AP Retail Writer Anne D'Innocenzio contributed to this report from New York.

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Stores in the snow-battered East Coast may have been sparse this weekend, but shoppers kept spending online. Retailers spurred sales with new discounts and shipping offers to make sure gifts arrive by...
Stores in the snow-battered East Coast may have been sparse this weekend, but shoppers kept spending online. Retailers spurred sales with new discounts and shipping offers to make sure gifts arrive by...
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03:46 PM on 12/21/2009
Ordinary Americans need a bailout, too not some tiny stimulus check

hat tip to http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com/

I though this recession would mark an age of frugality, but I guess not.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ResearchtheFacts
03:15 PM on 12/21/2009
Sorry had to extend the bargains...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ResearchtheFacts
03:14 PM on 12/21/2009
Just keep buying cheap Chinese folks." Between them and India they are laughing all the way to the bank. Oh, when you call tech support or customer service you will get to talk to them so they can thank you for your purchase.

What's wrong with this picture?

"said that the shoppers at the Walt Whitman Mall in Huntington, N.Y., were "serious about shopping. They're making up for lost time.

" He added that big chains hadn't sold out of their early morning deals on Saturday so they were extending those bargains."

Making up for lost time...translation they wanted to get out of the house after being snowed in. The fact they were not selling out and hand to extend bargains says it all.
03:31 PM on 12/21/2009
If you are going to buy something, buy it online.....

save on state taxes, most sites have free shipping....no need to go to actual stores..
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comicpro
Stupid Should Be Painful
12:24 PM on 12/21/2009
Thats right America spend every dime yu got max out that credit card and buy that WII or DSI for the kids. Spend spend spend to hell with saving for a rainy day! Now lets just hope you can eat those gifts when you have no money! hear if you put ketchup on pretty much anything makes it edible! Have we not learned anything from buying stuff made in China? Go ahead check where your stuff is made from.
12:14 PM on 12/21/2009
yay another green day on wall street while middle class suffers with pain at the pump, rising food prices, unaffordable health care &education.
http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com/

Goldman will report record bonuses as usual. Great country we live in, huh?
11:37 AM on 12/21/2009
Retailers will do anything to make sure they can sell off their inventory this Xmas. I empathize with them. They are trying to stay afloat in light of stagnant wages and low volume consumer spending. Their profit margins have shrunken, and are operating on a very narrow margin. Customers are very careful with their spending, and are waiting for even larger discounts.

Jobs are jobs. Retailers hire workers, and the dollar reverberation of jobs because of retail is significant.
But, this too, will slow in 2010. Hold on folks. The economy will likely take a major turn downward unless Obama wakes up and acts like FDR.

http://eye-on-washington.blogspot.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ResearchtheFacts
03:14 PM on 12/21/2009
Cattle herding at its finest.