RETAIL SHOPPING Bargain-hunters fuel solid start to holiday season



Sales on the day after Thanksgiving were up about 5 percent.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Thanksgiving weekend gave the nation's retailers a solid start to the holiday season, although consumers remained focused on bargains even as the economy improves.
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and other discounters attracted crowds of shoppers with specials on TVs, DVD players and toys and had the strongest sales. Department stores and mall-based clothing retailers were discounting less than they did last year, and their business was uneven.
"Sales appear to be better than last year, but the consumer is still value-oriented," and looking for big bargains, said Walter Loeb, who runs his own New York-based retail consulting firm.
The scene
A dozen people were standing in line Sunday outside a Best Buy in Dunwoody, Ga., a suburb of Atlanta, waiting for doors to open at 10 a.m. Charles and Susan Lynch were typical of many shoppers, willing to spend but hoping to get a good deal.
"I was unemployed this time last year so my economic situation has greatly improved," said Charles Lynch, who said the couple was looking for a home theater system.
Vanessa Gonzalez walked out of a Wal-Mart store in Miami on Saturday afternoon after buying an HP Pavilion desktop computer with a 17-inch monitor for $498.
"At that price, I couldn't resist," she said. She was planning to surprise her two teenagers with the computer.
"This will be their big present," she said. She added that she hadn't finished her holiday shopping, but didn't think she would spend too much more.
Analyst's view
Michael P. Niemira, a retail analyst at The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi Ltd., said the weekend "was pretty good, but it wasn't spectacular." He described business as stronger for discounters than it was for department stores and apparel merchants.
Ellen Tolley, a spokeswoman at the Washington-based National Retail Federation, noted that "it looks like [store] traffic was about the same as last year, possibly a little better than last year."
Total retail sales for Friday were up 4.8 percent to $7.2 billion from the Friday after Thanksgiving a year ago, after posting a 6.8 percent gain last year over 2001 results, according to ShopperTrak, which tallies sales at 30,000 retail outlets.
For Friday and Saturday combined, total sales were up about 5.5 percent, according to Niemira, a consultant with ShopperTrak.
Niemira said he still forecasts a sales gain of 4.5 percent for the November-December period, the best performance since 1999, when sales rose 5.4 percent. He based the estimate on sales from stores open at least a year, considered the best indicator of a retailer's health. Last holiday season's results were unchanged from 2001.