Skip navigation


Current DateTime: 07:33:14 12 Nov 2009
LinksList Documentid: 24355697

FEATURED QUIZZES


Current DateTime: 07:33:14 12 Nov 2009
LinksList Documentid: 33793611
  • The Billionaire BFF's

      Philanthropists. Bridge partners. Hockey players. Which responses are based on facts from Buffett's and Gates' real lives?

  • The Many Myths of Coca-Cola

      Can you tell which statements are true, and which ones are just rumors?

  • Think You Understand Markets?

      We've selected some questions from the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority's test of investor knowledge. See how you do ...


Current DateTime: 07:33:14 12 Nov 2009
LinksList Documentid: 24890560
  • Winterizing Your Portfolio

      If 2009 was the winter of our discontent, will 2010 be a winter wonderland for investors? A lot depends on the recovery—or lack thereof.

  • Investor's Guide to Real Estate

      Some even say the long-awaited recovery is here. Regardless, buyers and sellers alike can profit from our guide.

  • Alternative Investing

      Stocks and bonds? Sure. But it's a big world out there for investors.

powered by digg
On the Bright Side, Shopping Bargains Abound
By: Stephanie Rosenbloom, The New York Times | 04 Jul 2008 | 04:04 AM ET
Text Size

Anyone who has managed to forget about fuel prices long enough to enjoy a little retail therapy knows some steep discounts are available these days.

“I’ve noticed there is a ton of stuff on sale,” said Barbara Friedman, who was shopping on Thursday with a friend, Evelyn Hatfield, at Lord & Taylor in Midtown Manhattan. They were marveling at discounts as high as 50 percent in stores they had visited.

AP

Retailers deny that the gloomy economic landscape has prompted them to offer deeper and earlier discounts this summer than in previous years. But industry analysts and those who study marketing and consumer behavior say the stores have an incentive to pretend nothing is amiss, even as they post eye-popping sale signs.

“The sales are very aggressive,” said Marshal Cohen, the chief industry analyst at the NPD Group. “They’re trying to lure whatever dollar is available as quickly as they can get it.”

With consumer confidence at a 16-year low, retailers are clearly under pressure. A truer picture of the retailer situation should emerge next week when the big chains report sales numbers for June.

For now, Kathy Grannis, a spokeswoman for the National Retail Federation, a trade group, acknowledges only that sales to unload summer gear and make way for fall merchandise are “creeping up a little earlier” than in the past.

“It’s so early,” said Kit Yarrow, a consumer psychologist in San Francisco who has been noticing a proliferation of sales throughout department and specialty stores. “They keep an eye on each other. This year they’re in a panic to make sure they’re the first one.”

Rarely have consumers been this tight. Personal savings as a percentage of disposable personal income jumped to 5 percent in May, up from 0.4 percent in April.

If shoppers splurge it will most likely be on only one item this summer, Ms. Yarrow said, rather than three or four.

Half of the inventory at Ann Taylor [ANN  Loading...      ()   ] Loft is on sale, and shoppers can take an additional 20 percent off their entire purchase. Merchandise is up to 50 percent off at J. Crew, Banana Republic, Old Navy and the Body Shop.

At Macy’s , Ben Sherman men’s dress shirts were $59.99, marked down from $89.50. At Bergdorf Goodman this week, a swingy Chloe sundress was $625, down from $1,275. A black ruffled-hem Dolce & Gabbana dress was $711, down from $1,450.

J. C. Penney’s [JCP  Loading...      ()   ] “lowest prices of the summer” sale ended before the first Fourth of July fireworks started. Customers buying one towel or T-shirt could get a second for 88 cents. A new sale, celebrating Independence Day, has just begun.

“Zara is having a great sale,” said Stephanie Kinlock, 25, as she walked down Fifth Avenue. “The whole store is on sale.” Ms. Kinlock, who was carrying a Macy’s bag, said the deals this summer seemed better than last year. She had been shopping for a dress in Macy’s with her sister, Camille, 27.

“I came to help but I ended up buying,” she said.

David Wyss, chief economist at Standard and Poor’s, said many retailers are still hoping to grab a share of consumers’ tax rebate checks by offering tempting promotions. The last wave of checks will be mailed no later than next week. In May, retailers selling anything other than fuel or food barely saw an uptick from the checks, though electronics were an exception.

“That’s because when the average guy opens an $800 rebate check it looks a lot like a large-screen television set,” Mr. Wyss said.

When June sales at stores open at least a year, known as same-store sales and a barometer of retail health, are announced next week, analysts expect the results to be spotty, though certainly not all gloom and doom. They think pent-up demand, warm weather and the flurry of promotions will give a boost to some stores, even if it only means their negative sales figures are less negative.

Ken Perkins, the founder of Retail Metrics, a research group, said analysts expect a 2 percent increase in June sales. He characterized that as modest given the stimulus package and estimated an increase closer to 3 percent. “Nothing stellar but not too bad,” he said, “and sort of buoyed by the rebate.”

Kimberly Greenberger, an analyst with Citigroup, said she expects June same-store sales to improve by 2 to 3 percent over her May figure, which was negative 3. Many retailers now have better control over their inventories, she said, and rising temperatures mean that shorts and tank tops are no longer lingering on shelves.

Mr. Cohen of the NPD Group said the segments likely to fare the worst are women’s fashion and high-end footwear. Faring better will be parts of the home sector, he said, because people are sprucing up their homes rather than buying new ones.


Current DateTime: 07:33:15 12 Nov 2009
LinksList Documentid: 22528754

Sales of video games and toys should do well, he said, as parents do without so their children will not have to.

As for rebate checks, even if they do nudge sales up, analysts say the effect will not be long-lasting.

Lynn Franco, director of the Consumer Research Center at the Conference Board, a business membership and research organization, said the current environment reminds her of rebate checks the government handed out in 2001. “It had this one-quarter impact,” she said. “And there was a sort of retrenchment in spending.”

Of course that applies only to Americans. International shoppers are spending.

“We’ve seen a lot of Italians. A lot of Spaniards,” Ms. Hatfield, of Tulsa, said in Lord & Taylor. “Which of course says a lot about our dollar.” A falling dollar makes American goods cheaper for foreigners.

In Gucci, Ms. Friedman phoned her husband to tell him how overseas shoppers were buying several-thousand-dollar bags “like they’re giving it away.”

As Ms. Yarrow, the consumer psychologist, put it: “We’re the bargain-basement headquarters of the world.”

Copyright © 2009 The New York Times
Tools:
Print EmailAdd This share icon
  • digg share

CNBC HIGHLIGHTS

  • Billboard allows music lovers to watch concerts for free online, with five different camera angles.
  • US real estate prices have fallen dramatically, but some places are still doing well. See the best-performing zip codes this year.
  • An Italian cashmere maker aims to make profits while creating ideal conditions for his workers.
  • Just in time for the holidays, the Triumph company of Japan offers the latest innovation in women’s undergarments.
  • Vote and suggest your own, and remember--there's a fine line between a hero and a zero.
  • Health Care
  • The NYT explains what the Senate needs to do to improve cost and quality in U.S. health care.
ADD COMMENTS
Remaining characters


Current DateTime: 06:21:11 12 Nov 2009
LinksList Documentid: 29778428

Current DateTime: 01:02:03 12 Nov 2009
LinksList Documentid: 29779196

Current DateTime: 01:02:03 12 Nov 2009
LinksList Documentid: 29779199

Current DateTime: 01:02:03 12 Nov 2009
LinksList Documentid: 29779198
  Data is a real-time snapshot  *Data is delayed at least 15 minutes
Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis

© 2009 CNBC, Inc.  All Rights Reserved.
A Division of NBC Universal
Thomson ReutersThomson Reuters