More shoppers flocked to stores over the Thanksgiving weekend compared with last year, a sign that many consumers are returning to their prepandemic shopping behavior.
Roughly 197 million Americans visited stores or shopped online in the period between Thanksgiving Day and Cyber Monday, according to an estimate released Tuesday by the National Retail Federation.
The number of shoppers choosing physical stores surged from last year, up 17%, while the number of online shoppers rose 2%, said the NRF. The estimates were part of a consumer survey the retail trade group conducted with Prosper Insights & Analytics. The group’s forecast called for about 166 million people to shop over the five-day period.
The figures are in line with other data over the weekend that showed more shoppers headed back to the social activity of shopping. Some early data shows they didn’t buy more items than last year during those visits, but spending by dollar amount rose steadily amid higher prices.
Photos: Black Friday Is Back
Retail sales between Thanksgiving and this past Sunday rose 10.9% from a year earlier, according to Mastercard SpendingPulse, which measures all forms of payment. The data, which includes spending at restaurants, but not automobiles, aren’t adjusted for inflation.
Cyber Monday continued its run as the biggest day for online spending annually as sales rose 5.8% to $11.3 billion, according to
Adobe
Analytics, which tracks spending on websites.
Many product categories, including toys, computers, appliances and apparel, had deeper discounts from listed prices on Monday versus last year, Adobe said. Top sellers included Pokémon cards, Legos, and Hot Wheels among toys,
Apple
MacBooks and AirPods among tech items, smart TVs and air fryers, the firm said.
Heading into the holiday season, consumers showed signs of restrained spending on some items as the price of food, gas and other products remained elevated. Executives from retailers including
Walmart Inc.
and
Target Corp.
said in recent weeks shoppers had pulled back on discretionary spending and were eating into their savings to make purchases.
SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS
What do holiday retail numbers suggest about the state of the economy? Join the conversation below.
Spending is still happening, said NRF President
Matthew Shay
on a call with reporters Tuesday, as many people give priority to holiday celebrations and unemployment is still low. People have done roughly half of their holiday shopping so far based on surveys, Mr. Shay said. “There certainly is a recognition and concern about prices and inflation and yet people are still out spending,” he said.
Shoppers spent an average of $325.44 on holiday purchases over the weekend, up about 8% from 2021, the NRF said. U.S. consumer prices in October were up about 7.7% from the same month a year ago, a slowdown from June when inflation hit the highest level in four decades, according to the Labor Department.
Online spending grew at a slower pace over Black Friday weekend compared with last year as some shoppers favored bricks-and-mortar stores. Online sales on Black Friday rose 2.3% to $9.12 billion, according to Adobe. On Thanksgiving people spent $5.3 billion online, up 2.9% from the holiday last year, data show.
Write to Sarah Nassauer at Sarah.Nassauer@wsj.com
Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
More shoppers flocked to stores over the Thanksgiving weekend compared with last year, a sign that many consumers are returning to their prepandemic shopping behavior.
Roughly 197 million Americans visited stores or shopped online in the period between Thanksgiving Day and Cyber Monday, according to an estimate released Tuesday by the National Retail Federation.
The number of shoppers choosing physical stores surged from last year, up 17%, while the number of online shoppers rose 2%, said the NRF. The estimates were part of a consumer survey the retail trade group conducted with Prosper Insights & Analytics. The group’s forecast called for about 166 million people to shop over the five-day period.
The figures are in line with other data over the weekend that showed more shoppers headed back to the social activity of shopping. Some early data shows they didn’t buy more items than last year during those visits, but spending by dollar amount rose steadily amid higher prices.
Photos: Black Friday Is Back
Retail sales between Thanksgiving and this past Sunday rose 10.9% from a year earlier, according to Mastercard SpendingPulse, which measures all forms of payment. The data, which includes spending at restaurants, but not automobiles, aren’t adjusted for inflation.
Cyber Monday continued its run as the biggest day for online spending annually as sales rose 5.8% to $11.3 billion, according to
Adobe
Analytics, which tracks spending on websites.
Many product categories, including toys, computers, appliances and apparel, had deeper discounts from listed prices on Monday versus last year, Adobe said. Top sellers included Pokémon cards, Legos, and Hot Wheels among toys,
Apple
MacBooks and AirPods among tech items, smart TVs and air fryers, the firm said.
Heading into the holiday season, consumers showed signs of restrained spending on some items as the price of food, gas and other products remained elevated. Executives from retailers including
Walmart Inc.
and
Target Corp.
said in recent weeks shoppers had pulled back on discretionary spending and were eating into their savings to make purchases.
SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS
What do holiday retail numbers suggest about the state of the economy? Join the conversation below.
Spending is still happening, said NRF President
Matthew Shay
on a call with reporters Tuesday, as many people give priority to holiday celebrations and unemployment is still low. People have done roughly half of their holiday shopping so far based on surveys, Mr. Shay said. “There certainly is a recognition and concern about prices and inflation and yet people are still out spending,” he said.
Shoppers spent an average of $325.44 on holiday purchases over the weekend, up about 8% from 2021, the NRF said. U.S. consumer prices in October were up about 7.7% from the same month a year ago, a slowdown from June when inflation hit the highest level in four decades, according to the Labor Department.
Online spending grew at a slower pace over Black Friday weekend compared with last year as some shoppers favored bricks-and-mortar stores. Online sales on Black Friday rose 2.3% to $9.12 billion, according to Adobe. On Thanksgiving people spent $5.3 billion online, up 2.9% from the holiday last year, data show.
Write to Sarah Nassauer at Sarah.Nassauer@wsj.com
Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8