US HOLIDAY sales are expected to grow at their slowest pace in six years, data from Deloitte showed on Thursday as persistent inflation and dried up savings turn shoppers more frugal for the all-important shopping period.
Holiday retail sales are likely to rise between 2.3 per cent and 3.3 per cent in the November 2024-January 2025 period, totaling up to US$1.59 trillion, data report said, from a 4.3 per cent growth to US$1.54 trillion last year.
Sales grew 3.1 per cent in 2018.
Holiday season sales generally account for more than half of US retailers’ annual revenue.
A shorter season this year – with only 27 days between Thanksgiving and Christmas – has pushed retailers into launching higher promotional discounts earlier in the season.
Consumers across all income brackets have been hit by lower personal savings, which dipped to about 3.4 per cent in the recent months, compared to an average of 3.8 per cent in June this year, according to the report.
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Customers are expected to begin bargain hunting early, looking for additional discounts across categories including groceries and homegoods, as they tighten their purse strings.
By the numbers
Deloitte expects e-commerce sales to rise in the 7 to 9 per cent range in the 2024 holiday season, totaling up to US$294 billion, compared with the 10.1 per cent increase to US$270 billion last year.
In-store sales are expected to rise between 1.3 per cent and 2.1 per cent to up to US$1.3 trillion in the upcoming holiday season, compared to a rise of 3.1 per cent to US$1.27 trillion, a year ago.
“Rising credit card debt and the possibility that many consumers have exhausted their pandemic-era savings will likely weigh on sales growth this season compared to the previous one,” said Michael Jeschke, leader of Deloitte Consulting’s Retail & Consumer Products.
“Our forecast indicates that e-commerce sales will remain strong as consumers continue to take advantage of online deals to maximise their spending.” REUTERS