Shoppers put in a strong showing on Thanksgiving Day and Black Friday.
Holiday spending rose 9 percent Thursday and Friday combined, compared with the same two-day period last year, according to First Data.
The bump was fueled by shoppers turning to online deals.
E-commerce sales rose 10.8 percent for the two-day period, while sales at physical stores grew 8.6 percent, according to First Data, which analyzed online and in-store payments across different forms of payment cards from nearly one million merchants Thanksgiving and Friday. The data captures about 40 percent of all card transactions in the U.S. but excludes cash.
The Thanksgiving weekend kicks of the holiday shopping season though stores have increasingly started their sales earlier in October. The Friday after Thanksgiving — known as Black Friday — used to unofficially mark the kickoff to door-buster sales, but now retailers are opening earlier on Thanksgiving. But while the holiday weekend has lost some of its punch, it still sets the tone for the season.
“It was strong shopping,” said Rishi Chhabra, vice president, information and analytics products, at First Data. “But people are shopping online more. And that trend keeps going up and up.”
According to First Data, almost 25 percent of the holiday dollars spent over the two-day period came from e-commerce, up from 18 percent last year and nearly 16 percent in 2014. Electronics and appliances were by far the big attractions, with the category enjoying a 26.5 percent increase in sales, fueled by shoppers’ interest in TVs and other new gadgets. That compared to just a 2.3 percent increase in the year-ago period.
Four of the seven categories — which also include furniture and personal-care items — that First Data tracks showed slower sales growth in stores compared with online. But when it came to electronics, shoppers preferred to buy the products in the stores for the holiday start. Electronics and appliance stores saw a nearly 28 percent sales growth, while for online, that growth was a little over 11 percent.
Overall, the average dollar amount spent per person for the two-day period rose to $75.06, up from $72.84 a year ago. That figure for electronics and appliances grew by 34 percent to $163.76. But clothing and accessories stores saw shoppers on average spend $80.55, down from $81.63 a year ago amid heavy discounting. And sporting goods, hobby, books and music took more of a hit, with the average ticket size falling to $78.74 from $90.15.
The Associated Press contributed to this article.
People’s spirits are high, they now have confidence in their President elect and are ready to buy things they have been holding off on for 8 years. Its going to be a Great Christmas!
YES…., Your comment is correct and promising…..This help me rewarded and Elected New President Donald Trump…., I already spend $4,000 so far for Thanksgiving Holiday shopping…. Yes it is truly remarkable positive spirit because of our new revelation Leader that will restore American Great Again…. and remove our sickness Dictator Obama and Hillary out of Public Eye….. American People want renewal clean good Leadership Like Trump….. But Trump need to remove this Millions Illegal Immigrant who are Totally LAW BREAKER….Hispanic and theirs FUCKEN BABIES AS “ANCHOR BABIES” must go back to MEXICO NOR South America….(WHO GIVE THE SHIT….! WHERE THEY COME FROM….???) THEY MUST GO…..!!!!!
Purchasing is a great way to measure consumer confidence. President Obama wasn’t able to inspire much confidence in anyone. He seemed to embrace every concept which would hurt Americans. He rode into office on the hope and change mantra and soon left most intelligent people hoping for change away from him and his worldview.
Technically it’s not Trump’s economy yet, but public optimism can help the end of Obama’s economy (even though he can’t take credit). Hopefully Mr. Trump can follow through with enough of his campaign promises to help sustain this increase in business activity.