KEY POINTS
  • Black Friday weekend will take on additional importance this year after retailers like Target and Macy's reported a recent lull in sales.
  • Retail executives chalked up the slower sales to a return to pre-pandemic holiday shopping patterns, warmer-than-usual weather and the midterm elections.
  • A record number of people — 166.3 million — are expected to shop over the long weekend, according to the National Retail Federation.

Major retailers are under intense pressure to deliver on Black Friday after several of them reported a slowdown in sales heading into the do-or-die holiday shopping season.

Macy's, Target, Kohl's, Gap and Nordstrom spoke about a lull in sales in late October and early November. Target cut its holiday-quarter outlook and Kohl's pulled its forecast, citing the slow sales. Macy's CEO Jeff Gennette said shoppers kept visiting its stores and website during that lull, but the browsing did not turn into buying. Best Buy CEO Corie Barry said shoppers are showing more interest in sales than usual.